Honoring and praying for presidents past and present
02/17/2025
Mark 8:11-13 The Pharisees
came forward and began to argue with Jesus, seeking from him a sign from heaven
to test him. He sighed from the depth of his spirit and said, “Why does this
generation seek a sign? Amen, I say to you, no sign will be given to this
generation.” Then he left them, got into the boat again, and went off to the
other shore.
I saw a funny cartoon recently that
seemed apropos for Presidents Day. A dog and a cat both arrived in heaven and
are sitting on the floor looking at God who is seated on his glorious throne.
God first turns to the dog and asks: “How did you live your life on earth?” The
dog answers: “I fetched sticks, I obeyed my owner, and I barked at strangers
who walked by.”
Then God turns to the cat and asks:
“And how did you spend your life on earth?” The cat looks at God and says,
“You’re sitting in my seat.” Anyone who owns a dog or a cat knows how true
those two answers are. Dogs love to obey others while cats love to order
others.
And this little cartoon is related
to Presidents Day because in a sense every president feels a little like that
cat. Obviously, no United States president is God. Still, the office of the
president includes tremendous power – even if limited to the executive branch –
and enormous respect (bordering on reverence) by the people, at least those who
voted for him.
In other words, like the cat you
have to have a pretty big ego to want to sit in the principal seat of the Oval
Office. Like the cat in the cartoon the president is there to issue orders,
like executive orders, and to run the country.
As you may know, Presidents Day was
originally known as Washington’s Birthday, or simply celebrated in honor of
George Washington, our first president. But later it was broadened to include
all presidents, past and present. This date in February was chosen because it
was the Monday closest to Washington’s real birthday on February 22, 1732.
But Presidents Day is also unlike
the dog and cat cartoon because all the U.S. presidents have shown a healthy
reluctance of serving too long. They tend to agree with the 19th century
English historian Lord Acton, who believed: “Power corrupts and absolute power
corrupts absolutely.” That is, too much power can go to your head and make you
lose your sense of being a president.
Hence, after Franklin Delano
Roosevelt served 4 terms, the office of president could only be occupied by the
same person for two terms. After all, we had fought the Revolutionary War to
win freedom from monarchy – the rule of a king – and we did not want to return
to that potentially tyrannical form of government.
Perhaps on this Presidents Day it
would be helpful to recall another story about animals, not just a dog and a
cat, but an entire farm. Back when I was in elementary school, our 8th grade
teacher, Nancy Govang (whom I had a huge crush on) read to us a small allegory
book called Animal Farm by George Orwell, written in 1945.
It was about a farm in which the
animals revolt against their human masters – again kind of like the cat in the
cartoon. The animals are led by a pig named Napoleon, who eventually manages to
rid the farm of humans and establishes the rule of animals. Their revolutionary
motto is: “Four legs good, two legs bad.”
But little by little the pigs in
charge start to imitate the humans whom they had evicted. First the animals
start to trade crops with their human neighbors. Then the pigs move into the
house where the humans lived. Then, they start wearing human clothes and eat at
the table where the people had dinner.
Toward the end, two horses are
looking through the dining room window where the pigs and people are sharing a
meal together. And as the horses looked from the faces of the pigs to the faces
of the people, they could not tell them apart. In other words, the pigs had
become exactly like the people they had fought to overthrow.
The pigs, therefore, had
illustrated the truth of Lord Acton’s proverb: “power corrupts and absolute
power corrupts absolutely.” Maybe we should hang a plaque with Lord Acton’s
proverb over the doors to the Oval Office, and keep a copy of Animal Farm on
the Resolute Desk.
In the gospel today, Jesus notices
in the Pharisees a little of the spirit of the cat in the cartoon. They demand
he perform a sign (a miracle) to prove his divine status. But Jesus refuses to
reduce God’s miracles to the level of cheap parlor tricks to amuse dinner
guests. You see, the Pharisees wanted to usurp God’s throne and his
prerogatives. They wanted to order others, not to obey others, and they
certainly did not want to obey Jesus.
Today on Presidents Day, we pray
for the men – and perhaps one day the women – who occupy the Oval Office and
serve as presidents of the United States of America. May each of them remember
where we came from and the wars we fought to get here. And not get so
comfortable sitting in the president’s chair that when they get to heaven, they
say to God like the cat in the cartoon: “You’re sitting in my seat.”
Praised be Jesus
Christ!