Monday, June 08, 2020

Book Review: The Storm-Tossed Family by Russell Moore

The Storm-Tossed Family
How the Cross Reshapes the Home
by Russell Moore

I didn't find this book myself.  I've become more familiar with Russell Moore recently, especially after I was given a copy of his book Onward and really enjoyed it (sidenote: Onward is an excellent perspective on faith, culture, politics, and the Gospel).  My wife bought this book for me but one of my children grabbed it from its hiding place and I ended up finding it in the hallway, spoiling the present it was supposed to be several months later, but the timing was good as it was a great time to read through this book.

You are part of a family and family is difficult because family – every family – is an echo of the gospel.
In The Storm-Tossed Family, bestselling author Russell Moore teaches readers whether you are married or single, whether you long for a child or are shepherding a full house, you are part of a family.

Family can be the source of some of the most transcendent human joy, and family can leave us crumpled up on the side of the road. Family can make us who we are, and family can break our hearts. Why would this social arrangement have that much power, for good or for ill, over us?
--from Russell Moore's website
The central message of the book seemed to be that while family was important and family is defined in Scripture we shouldn't let it trump the Gospel.
Now large crowds were going along with Him; and He turned and said to them, “If anyone comes to Me, and does not hate his own father and mother and wife and children and brothers and sisters, yes, and even his own life, he cannot be My disciple.  Whoever does not carry his own cross and come after Me cannot be My disciple.
--from Luke 14:25-27 NASB

A variety of subjects are covered in the book from spiritual warfare, the church, men and women, marriage, sexuality, divorce, children, parenting, aging and more.  I found it very helpful to examine many things that we take for granted in our society in the light of Scripture to see what is worth keeping and what needs to be rejected or changed in light of God's commands.

If family means something terrible to you because you've endured horrors, then this book can help you reclaim a biblical view.  If family means everything to you then this book can help you reclaim a biblical view.  If family is something you can take or leave then this book can help you reclaim a biblical view.  Honestly, since we all have families I would suggest this book to every Christian.

Rating: 5 out of 5
Summary: An examination of how the message of the Gospel impacts family relationships.
Technical: Hardcover with dust jacket, 306 pages, includes end notes on sources.

~Matt

Wednesday, June 03, 2020

Gateway Arch National Park - Museum

On the day after we first saw the Lincoln Home site we drove south from our hotel to St. Louis so that we could explore Gateway Arch National Park.  I had been to the site as a kid at least once and in 2012 on our big trip out west Amy and I had stopped by what was then the Jefferson Expansion National Memorial.  First established in 1935 the park became a National Park in 2018.

The Gateway Arch reflects St. Louis' role in the Westward Expansion of the United States during the nineteenth century. The park is a memorial to Thomas Jefferson's role in opening the West, to the pioneers who helped shape its history, and to Dred Scott who sued for his freedom in the Old Courthouse.
--from Gateway Arch National Park

We found a parking garage downtown that wasn't too expensive and started walking towards the Arch.  As it dominates the local skyline we didn't have any fears of getting lost.
The entrance to the museum is through a new west entrance that takes you underground.
Once there we bought our tickets for our trip up the Arch later and headed towards the Museum.  On our way we saw this map showing the mater watercourses of North America.
As you approach the entrance to the museum we saw a number of screens setting the stage.

As you can see here there were also a number of narrower ones people walked past.
The museum looks quite a bit different than the last time we stopped in 2012 and is now quite a bit more open with many excellent exhibits.
You'll find many traditional signs and artwork just like you would in other museums.

However, the designers also really embraced technology and have incorporated a large number of screens with fascinating digital content.
This model shows a creole house of the type that many in St. Louis inhabited when it was a French settlement.  Rather than being built on a foundation the house was built on logs placed "directly into the earth, with infill between the logs bousillage, which was made of mud, horsehair, and rocks.  A Normal truss supports the roof, with a double pitch cascading over the galleries (porches) surrounding the house." --from exhibit signage
The first era presented in the museum was colonial St. Louis, from 1764 when the settlement was founded through 1804 when it was sold along with the rest of the Louisiana Purchase to the United States.
The city was founded as a trading post on the frontier, catering to the fur trade and commerce.  The French had just lost their Canadian territories to Great Britain.
Not only were there visual exhibits, but the various galleries also had auditory components.
Have you ever felt a deer hide?
Again there were technological components such as this recipe demonstration.
After the colonial era other major incidents in American history became the focus of the Museum, such as the Mexican War.

Did you know the war was not universally popular in the US?
New Spain was a large territory that won its independence from Spain in 1821 after a long war.
American settlers in the area that is now Texas eventually revolted against the Mexican government, partly because they wanted to keep slaves even though Mexico had outlawed slavery.  The self-proclaimed Republic of Texas claimed an area far larger than what it actually controlled.  The war started after the US annexed Texas and sent troops into the disputed lands between the Rio Grande and Nueces rivers where they got into a skirmish with Mexican forces.
Ulysses S. Grant was one of those who had been opposed to the war.

During the war American forces even occupied Mexico City.

The treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo ended the war and ceded all of northern Mexico to the United States.
In the years after the Mexican War many different groups headed west, especially into the Oregon Territory jointly administered by Great Britain and the United States.
The Mormons also headed west where they founded the colony that became Utah.
And in 1849 the lure of gold drew hundreds of thousands of people to California.
While the Pony Express gets the fame stagecoaches were a more popular method of traveling through the west for people and mail before the railroads.
From 1840 to 1860 the nation was consumed by the concept of Manifest Destiny and expansion.  I appreciated that the museum presented three different viewpoints on this era, from the American population of the time to Hispanic and Native American groups.  You cannot study this era and fine simple answers--it is full of nuance and different perspectives.
James Polk was a president consumed with expanding the United States.

The Mexican War was called the Yankee Invasion in Mexico and caused a massive disruption to the status quo--much more than earlier purchases of lands or more peaceful transitions had.

Also don't forget about the hundreds of treaties that have been made with Native American tribes, not all of which have been honored, or perhaps "honored more in the breach than in the observance" to quote the Bard.
This presentation I thought effectively presented the geographic context of an undoubtedly complex issue concerning American Indian Lands.

In 1783 European colonization of the then and future United States hadn't expanded much beyond the eastern seaboard.

By 1875 there had been many, many different broken treaties and the situation was much different.

I enjoyed seeing some artwork by Charles M. Russell.
There was also an opportunity to touch a bison hide.
Did you know that several ironclads were built south of St. Louis?  Sister ships including the Cincinnati were built in Mound City, Illinois.
The museum contained many, many more exhibits, more than I can possibly cover here.  If you're in the area it is well worth checking out.  It will definitely help you to think through what the era of westward expansion looked like.

~Matt

Tuesday, June 02, 2020

Lincoln Home National Historic Site

One of the purposes of our trip to Illinois and St. Louis was to explore Springfield, the location of the only home that Abraham Lincoln ever owned.  On the top of our list was the Lincoln Home National Historic Site, a restored area in the middle of Springfield.  We have previously been to Lincoln's birthplace (in Kentucky) and his boyhood home (in Indiana) but hadn't yet made it to the third state that claims the sixteenth president of the United States.

Follow in the footsteps of Abraham Lincoln as you explore the historic neighborhood surrounding his home of seventeen years. Restored to its 1860 appearance, the four-block area contains twelve historic structures dating back to Lincoln's time.

As you take a self-guided stroll through the neighborhood, you will find outdoor exhibits introducing Mr. Lincoln's neighbors and daily life in 1860s Springfield. The Dean House and the Arnold House are open to the public and contain exhibits on the Lincoln Home and the restoration and preservation of the neighborhood.
--from Lincoln Home NHS website

Our first stop was at the visitor center.

This exhibit was fun to see as once you go into the house itself you of course cannot touch anything.

I also appreciated the opportunity to look at a model of the area to learn what it was like.
Before too long we headed outside to explore the neighborhood.  It really did feel like walking through a previous century.  Once you got out of easy view of cars and other neighborhoods it was obvious that a good job was done restoring the area.
The Dean House owes its name to the property owner of record during 1860, Abraham Lincoln’s final full year of residence in Springfield, Illinois, before he departed for Washington to assume the presidency early in 1861. Mrs. Harriet Dean held title to the property from 1849 until 1860, the year of her death, after which her son, Frederick Irwin Dean, inherited.
--from Lincoln Home NHS website
Inside the Dean House are a number of exhibits about the area.

Just over a year after they were married the Lincolns purchased this house on Eighth Street in May 1844.  The price was $1,500.
The house was remodeled in the late 1840s to make a number of small improvements like fireplaces and some minor repairs.
Another remodel in the 1850s consisted of removing the roofs and creating a full second story to accommodate the growing Lincoln family.
Outside we encountered an example of a kitchen garden.
As we walked by the Lincoln Home again a tour was preparing to enter.  We'd decided to save the house tour for another day (which will be covered in a future post).
According to the 1860 census, the house was rented to Henson Lyon, a farmer. The Lyon family had moved to Sangamon County in 1834 and operated a farm two and a half miles east of Springfield. By 1860, Lyon, his son, Thomas, Huldah Burge and her three children, and three other persons resided in the structure.
--from Lincoln Home NHS website
The Beedle house was built around 1840-41. By 1860 the house was rented by William Beedle, a railroad fireman who occupied the house with one servant, Kate Tierney. The house is a wood frame 26'2" x 49'6" 2 story Italianate style house with a hip roof, a 1 story front porch, and a 1 story rear porch....   The house was restored to it's 1860 appearance in 1984.
--from Lincoln Home NHS website
Arnold would reside in the house from 1850 until 1879. Arnold was a political ally of Abraham Lincoln, both being members of the Whig party. He served twice as the County Sheriff on the Whig Ticket.

By the late 19th and early 20th centuries, a series of families made their home on this corner lot. Additions were made to the original structure. By 1917, Springer's early home had been encased in brick and siding.

By the mid 1990s, restoration work was begun on the Arnold House, Springer's structure was found to still survive as part of the later structure. The original structure, freed from the later additions, was rotated and moved back to the front of the lot and restored to it's 1860s appearance. Today, the Arnold House is open to the public, and houses exhibits on the Lincoln neighborhood and its restoration and preservation.
--from Lincoln Home NHS website
The exhibits inside the Arnold house were very interesting as they covered the restoration process and history of the buildings.
The preservation process actually started fairly early in American history with the purchase of a former George Washington headquarters home in 1850, followed shortly thereafter by the creation of the Mount Vernon Ladies Association in 1858.  Preservation of the Lincoln home began when it was donated to the state of Illinois in 1887 by the family.  These objects in this case were found during the restoration of local homes--inside walls, beneath floorboards, or other nooks and crannies of the buildings.
There were a number of signs covering each of the families that owned these buildings when the Lincolns lived in the area.
Archaeology is also an invaluable part of the restoration process--for example you can find much by excavating the ground where outhouses used to stand, for many people used them to throw away household trash.
 Did you know that sometimes seeing how wood was joined together in part of a house can help to date the construction?
Plaster types can also be used to help identify age.
These beautiful blooms were next door to the Cook house.

In 1860 and 1861, Mrs. Sarah Cook rented the property. A widow with a number of children, Mrs. Cook rented some of the rooms in the house. Earlier, Mrs. Cook had operated a photographic studio in Springfield. The house passed through numerous owners before being aquired by the National Park Service.
--from Lincoln Home NHS website
The Jenkins lot doesn't have a house standing on it, but there is an augmented reality app.  I think things like this are an excellent way to continue interpretation when conditions have changed or there is no longer a building to preserve.
The original Robinson house was built around 1859-60. It was significantly altered in 1863. This house belonged to Henson Robinson, a Springfield businessman and civic leader. He and his wife had five children during the time they lived here.

The beautifully restored home is a two-story, front gabled Greek Revival wood frame structure.
--from Lincoln Home NHS website
The streets were quite pleasant and often shaded.
The Shutt House was built prior to 1859, the house was rented to lawyer George Shutt in 1860. This young lawyer was active in politics of the Democratic party, unlike most of Abraham Lincoln's politically active neighbors. Shutt supported Stephen A. Douglas in the presidential Campaign of 1860...  The house was restored to an 1860 exterior appearance in 1989. It is used as leased office space, and in 2006 housed the Springfield office of U.S. Senator Dick Durbin.
--from Lincoln Home NHS website
This house was built around 1858 for Jesse K. Dubois. It served as the home of his family from 1859 to 1864. During the years that he and his family lived in the house, Dubois served as the Illinois State Auditor.

Dubois was one of the most important political allies of Abraham Lincoln within the neighborhood. Dubois was a confidant of Lincoln, and a powerful Republican politician and office-holder. The Lincoln and Dubois families moved in the same social circles, and the Duboises named one of their sons for Lincoln.
--from Lincoln Home NHS website
The Sprigg House was constructed about 1851 by John B. Weber. Mrs. Julia Sprigg, a widow, purchased it in 1853 for use as a residence for herself and her children. While living in the house, Mrs. Sprigg became close friends with neighbor Mary Lincoln. The Lincolns' youngest son, Tad, was a frequent visitor to the Sprigg house.
--from Lincoln Home NHS website
Before we headed back to the visitor center we stopped back by the Lincoln home and found this display that encouraged guests to take a photo from the angle that most photos of the house have been taken.

Here is my shot from that spot.
Back at the visitor center we caught a couple of movies and then headed out for the day.

You can see more pictures from our visit in this album.

~Matt