A
Man After God's Own Heart
by Gary
DeMar
By the time the United States entered World War I, Theodore Roosevelt
was a private citizen. Though no longer president, the nation continued
to look to him for advice and wisdom. In 1917, when American troops were
preparing to sail across the Atlantic for the battlefields of Europe,
the New York Bible Society asked Roosevelt to inscribe a message in the
pocket New Testament that each soldier would be given. The former president
gladly obliged. He began with what he called the Micah Mandate:
The teaching of the New
Testament is foreshadowed in Micah’s
verse, “What
more doth the Lord require of thee than to do justice, and
to love
mercy, and to walk humbly with thy God.” Do
justice;
and therefore fight valiantly against those that stand for the reign
of Moloch and Beelzebulb on this earth. Love mercy; treat
your enemies well; succor the afflicted; treat every woman as if
she were your sister; care for the little children; and be tender
with the old and helpless. Walk humbly; you will
do so if you study the life and teachings of the Savior, walking
in His steps. And remember; the most perfect machinery of government
will not keep us as a nation from destruction if there is not within
us a soul. No abounding of material prosperity shall avail us if
our own spiritual senses atrophy. The foes of our own household will
surely prevail against us unless there be in our people an inner
life which gives its outward expression in a morality like unto that
preached by the seers and prophets of God when the grandeur that
was Greece and the glory that was Rome still lay in the future.
My father
served in the Pacific during World War II, and the New Testament he
carried with him contained Roosevelt’s Micah Mandate. Roosevelt
knew that “the teachings of the Bible are so interwoven and entwined
with our whole civic and social life that it would be literally impossible
for us to figure ourselves what that life
would be if these standards were removed.” He highly valued God’s
holy word and wanted to give American soldiers a striking biblical call
for a life of balance.
What most history books don’t tell us is that Theodore Roosevelt
had a heart for the living God. His published works contain over 4,200
biblical images, inferences, and quotations, and many of his unpublished
letters and writings contain thousands more. A graduate of Harvard, Roosevelt
stated that “A thorough knowledge of the Bible is worth more than
a college education.”
All of these titles belong to
Roosevelt: Nobel Peace Prize winner, naval historian, essayist, biographer,
paleontologist, taxidermist, big-game hunter, rancher, orator, conservationist,
patron of the arts, Colonel of the cavalry, former New York governor, a
father, and president of the United States. But the one title that Roosevelt
would value more highly than any other would be “a man of God.”
Gary
DeMar is president of American Vision and the author of more than 20 books. His latest is Myths, Lies, and Half Truths.
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