http://www.christianitytoday.com/ch/thisweekinchristianhistory/
"May 28, 1954: President Dwight D. Eisenhower signs a bill adding the words "under God" to the Pledge of Allegiance."
Is the next excerpt an example of what happens when we are not a nation "...under God.", allowing His Word to inform our lives?
"May 29, 1453: Constantinople, capital of Eastern Christianity since Constantine founded it in 324, falls to the Turks under Muhammad II, ending the Byzantine Empire. Muslims rename the city Istanbul and turn its lavish cathedral, Hagia Sophia, into a mosque (see issue 74: Christians & Muslims)."
The Byzantine Empire, which was comprised of the eastern half of the Roman Empire, stood from 1025 to 1453 - a span of over 400 years! It's capital, Constantinople, was situated as an important bridge between Western Asia Minor and Eastern Europe, resulting in immense benefit from all trade between those regions.
That trade would include the exchange of things of a material, intellectual and cultural nature, a genuine melding pot of the world's peoples.
Therefore, Constantinople was highly instrumental in the spread of the Gospel of Jesus Christ as traders and travelers from all across Asia and Europe met within this great, wealthy city and heard the Good News.
However, with the passage of the centuries, the Nobles of the Empire became wealthy by oppression of the peasants (stealing their land and trampling their limited civil rights) and there was also an erosion of spiritual values within the Church, a combination of events that led to the decline and fall of the once-powerful Byzantine Empire.
The Muslim hordes swept in from the deserts of Arabia and overthrew the "Christianized" empire, replacing it with the false religion of Islam.
http://www.flowofhistory.com/units/birth/5/FC45
Islam, it should be noted, has its roots in the offspring of Ishmael, Abraham's "illegitimate" son who was born as a result of Abe impatiently trying to hurry along God's promise of a son. Therefore in the minds of many, Islam represents what happens when we do things, even good things, our way instead of God's way. It never brings good results.
How does a nation, or an empire, crumble? Do we wake up one day and suddenly find that everything around us has fallen apart, financially, morally, and spiritually?
Usually not. Because although a nation may appear to be a monolithic structure, we all know that it is comprised of millions of individuals whose long-term, collective actions form the whole. So when we witness the disintegration of a nation, what we are really seeing is the cumulative outcome of millions of poor choices, decisions that run contrary to the Word, the Life that we long ago received through inspiration of the Bible writers and more recently, through the Son of God.
"The Word became flesh and blood,
and moved into the neighborhood.
We saw the glory with our own eyes,
the one-of-a-kind glory,
like Father, like Son,
Generous inside and out,
true from start to finish. " (John 1:14, The MESSAGE)
In light of that understanding, how seriously should we take that Word that has been left for our instruction, guiding our actions? How well do we use the freedom that we still enjoy in our western nations? It is indisputable that if our nations (read: ALL of US, as a collective of individuals) return to being "one nation under God", we can continue to enjoy the blessing of the freedom which accompanies such living. Because God honors those who honor his name, the key being "honoring His name".
Otherwise, well, just see the history lesson for today!
"Eternal Father, you are above all. Turn our hearts back to worshiping you, and restore your glory in our lives and in our lands. Through Christ, Amen"
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JQceYLvCuW0&feature=relmfu
"June 1, 1843: Isabella Baumfree, having received a vision of God telling her to "travel up an' down the land showin' the people their sins an' bein' a sign unto them," leaves New York and changes her name to Sojourner Truth. She became one of the most famous abolitionists and women's rights lecturers in American history (see issue 62: Bound for Canaan)."
"June 2, 597: Augustine, missionary to England and first archbishop of Canterbury, baptizes Saxon king Ethelbert, the first Christian English king. The missionary's tomb in Canterbury bears this epitaph: "Here rests Augustine, first archbishop of Canterbury, who being sent hither by Gregory, bishop of Rome, reduced King Ethelbert and his nation from the worship of idols to the faith of Christ" (see the article on Bede in issue 72: How We Got Our History)."
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C_wJtQfYddc&feature=fvwrel