The sword is, as it were, consecrated to God; and the art of war becomes a part of our religion.” –Samuel Davies

Wednesday, February 29, 2012

Camp du Bois, February 2012

This past weekend I had the opportunity to spend some time with some good folks at a primitive camping event.  The site was Camp du Bois on the Wood River in Illinois which was where Lewis and Clark wintered in 1803-04.

It’s been a while since I’ve experienced the “pleasure” of a winter camp.  I recall years ago spending the night in a primitive log cabin during a virtual blizzard, where my friend Mark, my brother Steve and myself had to slog through snowdrifts that were thigh-high just to get to the cabin!  This time my friend Mark and I arrived at the camp at about 8 p.m. where we met our mutual friend, Simeon.  Our common faith in the Lord Jesus Christ and our common love of early American history has united us together in a new but growing friendship.  We started a fire in the fireplace and after visiting some other folks in an adjoining cabin we returned to our cabin and made ready for bed.
                                                                   
It didn’t take long for me to wish we’d had a lot more firewood and had stoked that fireplace to the brim!  With the outside temperature dipping under 30 degrees I soon realized the oil cloth and two blankets I had brought with me just weren’t enough to keep out the cold.  I felt like I never slept at all that night.  While I was musing on my “sufferings” I couldn’t help but think of the real hardships suffered by our forefathers.  I’ve recently been reading Joseph Plumb Martin’s memoirs of his service during the War for Independence.
It seemed as though there wasn’t a day that went by when he wasn’t cold, or hungry, or sick, or tired, or all of them at the same time!  I thought especially of the following passage from his narrative:

“Next morning we joined the grand army near Philadelphia, and the heavy baggage being sent back to the rear of the army, we were obliged to put us up huts by laying up poles and covering them with leaves; a capital shelter from winter storms [I’m sure he’s kidding!].  Here we continued to fast; indeed we kept a continual lent as faithfully as ever any of the most rigorous of the Roman Catholics did.  But there was this exception, we had no fish or eggs or any other substitute for our commons.  Ours was a real fast, and depend upon it, we were sufficiently mortified.”1

How ironic that I read that very passage during the very time of the year many people observe Lenten.  The concept that a person can earn God’s favor by denying himself the desires of the heart has no foundation in Holy Scripture; it is rather the tradition of man.  As Isaiah said so long ago, the best we can do is still filthy rags in the eyes of a holy God (Is. 64:6).  The Apostle Paul put the idea to rest in his epistle to the Romans in the third chapter where, citing the Old Testament prophets, he rightly proclaims all men hopelessly unable to justify themselves by keeping the Law (Rom 3:19-20).  Only by the imputation of Christ’s righteousness can we ever stand in the sight of God.  Any works of our own are no more spiritually efficacious than Martin’s starvation was.

Starvation was only one of the problems Martin and his comrades had to contend with.  Shortly after the above-quoted passage occurred, he relates the following:

“The army was now not only starved but naked; the greatest part were not only shirtless and barefoot, but destitute of all other clothing, especially blankets.  I procured a small piece of raw cowhide a made myself a pair of moccasons, which kept my feet (while they lasted) from the frozen ground, although, as I well remember, the hard edges so galled my ancles, while on a march, that it was with much difficulty and pain that I could wear them afterwards; but the only alternative I had, was to endure this inconvenience or to go barefoot, as hundreds of my companions had to, till they might be tracked by their blood upon the rough frozen ground.  But hunger, nakedness and sore shins were not the only difficulties we had at that time to encounter; - we had hard duty to perform and little or no strength to perform it with.”2

                                                                           
While I was shivering in bed, I thought about these trials of Martin’s and suddenly my problems didn’t seem so bad.  I knew within a few hours I would be sleeping in a heated home, in a warm bed.  Even though I was cold in the cabin, my stomach wasn’t empty like his was on an almost constant basis.  Although I’ve worn some uncomfortable straight-last shoes and loose-fitting moccasins, I’ve never worn them to the extent that they tore up my feet.  Then again, I’ve never had to march like Martin and his comrades did.

I suppose that’s what living history is all about.  We can never replicate exactly, in every detail, the conditions that these fathers of ours lived through but as we seek to honor their memory by walking as best we may in their footsteps, we do gain a newfound respect for them and the cost in blood, sweat and tears they paid for our liberty.  Praise God that He raised up such men!


Semper Reformata,
Dale


1)      Joseph Plumb Martin, A Narrative of a Revolutionary Soldier (New York, NY: Signet Classics, 2010), p. 85.
2)      Joseph Plumb Martin, A Narrative of a Revolutionary Soldier, p. 88.

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