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Friday's Internet Edition, 09:38 PM, May 09, 2008.

Stories 121-180 Days
Stories 181- 210 Days
Archive 60-120 Days

Urinary Calculi in Sheep and Goat by Sam Silvers - Edwards County Extension Agent
Rocksprings...............
We’ve got a problem!
$1,000 reward offered

Outstanding Citizen will be recognized
Exercises for Osteoporosis, Third Edition
Idle American
Commentary by Dr. Don NewburyLife on Top of the World…

Hunter found after getting lost Monday
Water News By Lee Sweeten, GM, Real Edwards Conservation & Reclamation District
Fire destroys home, another burns over 6, 000 acres over past week

Main Street Project begins
Groups discuss community service and a community fair
Hearing held on Barksdale’s Little Rock Church dilemma
Nancy Littefield speaks to Woman’s Club
Reba Whittle among veteran’s to be honored at Admiral Nimitz Museum

Fire destroys home, another burns over 6, 000 acres over past week
Main Street Project begins
Groups discuss community service and a community fair
Hearing held on Barksdale’s Little Rock Church dilemma
Shanklin and Adkins win Bridge Club championship
Nancy Littefield speaks to Woman’s Club
Reba Whittle among veteran’s to be honored at Admiral Nimitz Museum

Rocksprings Girl Scouts to sell cookies
Angoras win Bi-District, advance to Area competition
Emergency Services Auxiliary Update
U. S. P. O. postage increase drives subscription rates up
Rocksprings Wool & Mohair is no more
When the Rain Ends
How the removal of water-guzzling brush from rural areas can help big cities prepare for the next drought.
By Larry D. Hodge

PEC Board puts District 7 Director position on ballot
Carson Sweeps Journalism Events
Six Students Place at Bandera UIL Meet

Fire rages over 2,200 acres in Carta Valley area
Civic Fair idea presented to City Council
A New Face in the Region
Idle American
Commentary by Dr. Don Newbury
‘Knight-less’ Basketball…

Time to lay aside differences and to get planning
Still Dry
City honors outstanding citizens-Ruth and Ben

Fire rages over 2,200 acres in Carta Valley area
School removes Holocaust mention from history books
Scotch and Cottle named to university honor’s lists
Fires plague county as winds prevail
Idle American
Commentary by Dr. Don Newbury
Bye-Bye, Blackbirds?...

PEC’s Light the Way program honors community organizations
Special Rangers arrest suspect in saddle, equipment theft case
Stolen property valued at more than $20,000

City honors outstanding citizens-Ruth and Ben
City honors outstanding citizens-Ruth and Ben

Dr. Gary S. Smith
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As we celebrate Presidents’ Day in 2008, we are in the midst of campaigns to select Democratic and Republican nominees for president. Recognizing that George W. Bush’s candid discussion of his faith played a key role in his electoral success in both 2000 and 2004, both Democratic and Republican candidates have frequently emphasized how their faith has helped make them who they are and how it influences their policies. As we think about how the faith of a president might affect his or her work, Abraham Lincoln provides an excellent role model.

Believing that God was just and that his plans would prevail, Lincoln struggled greatly to determine and follow God’s will for himself as president and his nation torn by war. Certainly, there is no contending against God’s will, Lincoln wrote, “but still there is some difficulty in ascertaining, [and] applying it, to particular cases.”

Replying to a group of religious leaders who urged him in September 1862 to free the nation’s slaves, Lincoln explained that clergymen who were “equally certain that they represented the divine will” gave him opposite advice. Was it not more likely that God would reveal his will to him than to others on this issue? Lincoln asserted that “it is my earnest desire to know the will of Providence in this matter. And if I can learn what it is, I will do it.” Because these were not “the days of miracles,” he did not expect to receive “a direct revelation.” Therefore, he “must study the plain physical facts of the case ... and learn what appears to be wise and right.”

That same month, Lincoln wrote privately that the “will of God prevails.” His purpose in the Civil War might be quite different from that of either the North or the South. God “could have saved or destroyed the Union without a human contest. Yet the contest began.” Moreover, “he could give the final victory to either side any day. Yet the contest proceeds.”

After two more years of death and destruction, Lincoln wrote that the “purposes of the Almighty are perfect and must prevail, though we erring mortals may fail to accurately perceive them in advance. We hoped for a happy termination of this terrible war long before this,” he added, “but God knows best and has ruled otherwise. We shall yet acknowledge his wisdom and our own error.” Using the best light God provided, Unionists must trust that their labor “still conduces to the great ends he ordains. Surely he intends some great good to follow this mighty convulsion.”

“I claim not to have controlled events,” Lincoln wrote a Kentucky newspaper editor in 1864, “but confess plainly that events have controlled me. ... If God now wills the removal of a great wrong, and wills also that we of the North as well as you of the South, shall pay fairly for our complicity in that wrong, impartial history will find therein new cause to attest and revere the justice and goodness of God.”

Lincoln believed that in directing history, God used people to accomplish his plans, and he saw himself as God’s agent on earth. This helped him cope with problems and defeats.Register of the Treasury Lucius E. Chittenden maintained Lincoln told him that “one of the plainest statements of the Bible” was that God used “human agencies, and directly intervenes in human affairs. ... I am satisfied that when the Almighty wants me to do or not do a particular thing, he finds a way of letting me know.”

While emphasizing that God’s actions were often difficult to understand and his purposes frequently clashed with human desires, Lincoln counseled Americans to trust in God’s goodness and submit to his will. Calling himself a “humble instrument in the hands of our Heavenly Father,” he insisted that “we must believe” that God permitted the war “for some wise purpose of His own, mysterious and unknown to us ...” and “that He who made the world still governs it.”

Unlike the vast majority of statesmen, Lincoln refused to identify God’s will with his own cause. Because humans could not fully understand God’s purposes, they should not presume that he was on their side. Lincoln, argued theologian Reinhold Niebuhr, was the rare person who could govern during a crisis “without equating his interpretation of the task with the divine wisdom.”

Repudiating a “God bless America” theology that ignored the nation’s sins and culpability, Lincoln urged all Americans to reflect and repent. As Garry Wills emphasizes, “Lincoln mourned for the South, instead of denouncing it” and “mourned for the North, instead of celebrating it.” As did many African-American Christians, Lincoln emphasized forgiveness and trusted that God was accomplishing his purposes in the midst of people’s affliction.

By emulating Lincoln’s confidence in God’s sovereignty, desire to know and implement God’s will as he understood it, recognition of sin, call for repentance, willingness to forgive his opponents, and humility, political leaders and other Americans as well can better promote justice and peace in our troubled world.

V & V
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Dr. Gary Scott Smith chairs the History Department at Grove City College, is a fellow for Faith and the Presidency with the Center for Vision & Values, and is the author of Faith and the Presidency: From George Washington to George W. Bush (Oxford University Press, 2006).

CX Team advances to State
Yelverton and Reed place second at District

School removes Holocaust mention from history books

Natural brush control methods explored at Sonora Seminar
The law on placement of campaign signs
Dr. Nathan Galloway
speaks to Woman’s Club

Edwards Plateau Prescribed Burning Assn., Inc. guidelines
By Charles “Butch” Taylor

District declares drought
Deputies Adams and Guertin attend Taser training
Spring, the season for oak wilt spread
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