New York Post

Enough PC Proclamati­ons

Presidents can’t ignore sin

- Rich lowry

IF Abraham Lincoln released his October 1863 Thanksgivi­ng proclamati­on today, it would be panned by all sides. In the statement that is considered the beginning of the unbroken annual tradition of presidenti­al Thanksgivi­ng proclamati­ons, Lincoln said that God had dealt “with us in anger for our sins.” He recommende­d “humble penitence for our national perversene­ss and disobedien­ce.”

The words “sin” and “perverse” would set off the left as overly judgmental and embarrassi­ngly archaic. The right would bristle at national selfcritic­ism from the country’s commanderi­nchief (at a time of war, no less).

Lincoln had good reason to speak of perversity, of course. He was kneedeep in blood in a Civil War precipitat­ed by half the country leaving the Union so it could protect slavery. But his proclamati­on was firmly within the American tradition.

The Thanksgivi­ng proclama tion at Charlestow­n, Mass., in 1676 referred to God’s “sore displeasur­e against us for our sins.” The founding generation of presidents struck similar notes.

In 1789, George Washington urged that we “unite in most humbly offering our prayers and supplicati­ons to the great Lord and Ruler of Nations and beseech him to pardon our national and other transgress­ions.” John Adams in 1798 recommende­d that religious congregati­ons “acknowledg­e before God the manifold sins and transgress­ions with which we are justly chargeable as individual­s and as a nation.”

This line carried through into the 20th century. Dwight Eisenhower spoke of the need to “bow before God in contrition for our sins.” Both Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush quoted George Washington on “our shortcomin­gs and transgress­ions.” But any suggestion of national failings, let alone sin or perversity, has gone missing from the Thanksgivi­ng proclamati­ons of recent decades (and so has much of the majesty).

Without it, we lose any sense that we have an obligation to live up to a national standard that de rives, if not from the God of the Bible, from the natural law. This has always been part of what makes America different from other nations. France will always be France no matter what, but America involves striving toward an ideal.

The great political scientist Samuel Huntington, in rebutting the New Left of the 1960s whose sense of the nation’s sinfulness exceeded all reasonable bounds, stated it nicely.

“Critics say that America is a lie because its reality falls so far short of its ideals,” he wrote. “They are wrong. America is not a lie; it is a disappoint­ment. But it can be a disappoint­ment only because it is also a hope.” Or as Lincoln put it in his famous phrase, we are “the almost chosen people.”

Not surprising­ly, President Obama’s Thanksgivi­ng proclamati­ons have been particular­ly pedestrian and perfunctor­y.

God is lucky to get a mention or two. In his 2009 proclamati­on, the only reference to God came in a quote from George Washington. If his proclamati­on of “America Recycles Day” (“we rededicate ourselves to building a more sustainabl­e future”) invoked the divine providence somewhere it wouldn’t be so different in tone or content from his Thanksgivi­ng proclamati­ons.

What God has lost in prominence in Obama’s statements has been gained by the American Indians, in a bow to multicultu­ral pieties. His 2010 proclamati­on described how a spirit of Thanksgivi­ng “brought together the newly arrived Pilgrims and Wampanoag tribe — who had been living and thriving around Plymouth, Mass., for thousands of years — in an autumn harvest feast centuries ago.”

His proclamati­on last year urged the country “to remember the ways that the First Americans have enriched our Nation’s heritage, from their generosity centuries ago to the everyday contributi­ons they make to all facets of American life.” Near the end, that proclamati­on included the ringing, “Let us pause to recount the simple gifts that sustain us, and resolve to pay them forward in the years to come.”

From Lincoln’s “fervently implore the interposit­ion of the Almighty hand to heal the wounds of the nation” to Obama’s “pay it forward” is a long way down.

 ?? Getty ?? In Abe’s shadow: Presidenti­al proclamati­ons of Thanksgivi­ng haven’t lived up to Lincoln.
Getty In Abe’s shadow: Presidenti­al proclamati­ons of Thanksgivi­ng haven’t lived up to Lincoln.
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