19 November 1863 A.D. Gettysburg
Presbyterian Church—Abraham Lincoln and Elder John L. Burns
November 19: John L. Burns
Two Heroes of Gettysburg Attend a Presbyterian
Church
The High
Water Mark of the Civil War, the Battle of Gettysburg, had been fought
that July of 1863. Attending just four months later in the same town of
Pennsylvania, was President Abraham Lincoln for the dedication of the new
National Cemetery in that town. The president wasn’t the main speaker that day
of dedication. But he delivered a short pithy message which he thought
was a failure, due to its brevity, but which turned into an immortal address
which the world will long remember.
One of
the residents of Gettysburg Lincoln wanted to meet, after the
presentation, was local and later national hero John L. Burns. The latter
was the only civilian who grabbed his old War of 1812 flintlock, and exchanging
it for a more modern weapon from a wounded Union soldier, joined in the
fighting of the Confederate army on July 1, 1863. His fame
immediately after that brief stint in battle, at which he was wounded
three times, caused his name to be on every lip, including that of President
Lincoln.
It was
on November 19,
1863 that the President of the United States met John
Burns at the home of attorney David Wills. The latter had been responsible
more than any one else for setting aside the plots of ground which later on
became the National Cemetery of Gettysburg. Wills was also a ruling elder in
the Presbyterian Church of Gettysburg on Baltimore Street. Together, John Burns
and Abraham Lincoln, along with David Wills, walked south down Baltimore Street
to the building of the Presbyterian Church to attend a patriotic service held
there that evening. It was reported that the seventy-one year
old Burns slept through much of the service, but Abraham Lincoln was able to be
present for most of the service, before duties called him back to Washington,
D.C.
A
century later in 1962, the church building was replaced with another
building, and all the furnishings with it, with the exception of “the
Lincoln – Burns Pew” which can still be seen in the new church at the same
location.
Words to live by: There
are “heroes” in church history who have been mentioned in great
advances of the Lord’s kingdom and church. In point of reference, this
very historical devotional is all about Christian, and more
specifically Christian Presbyterians who have been used of the Holy Spirit to
advance the Kingdom of Christ in various periods of time and places. It is
as we acknowledge these men and women of the Presbyterian faith that we are
more fully appreciate the progress of the church in general, and our local
church in particular. So, as you look at your church of your choice, who among
them can be found who have in the past or present been instrumental in
advancing the cause and kingdom of Christ? After you identify them,
why not go up to them and thank the Lord for their spiritual gifts which have been
used for God’s glory and His cause? It will both praise the Lord and
encourage their hearts to know that someone has remembered them for all
their hard work.
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