A year and a half ago, not many miles down the road from my Mum, an elderly lady in a Nursing Home slipped quietly away to meet her Maker. It was a predictable event, given that she was nearly 111 years old - by any contemporary reckoning her passing was almost overdue.
What made Mrs Florence Green's death into news was that she was the last living First World War Veteran. This is a technical term in that as a 17 year old she joined the newly formed Royal Air Force right at the end of the war and worked a few weeks as a waitress in the Mess but this rendered her a servicewoman and therefore an official Veteran. By starting late and living long she became the symbolic end of the living human story of the Great War, closing the book on the war to end all wars almost 100 years after it began as the reporter rather beautifully put it.
So there you have it.
The unpalatable human fact that every single man and woman who served in the First World War died. On Sunday at the Cenotaph Isaac Watts version of Psalm 90 was sung . . . Time like an ever rolling stream bears all its sons away.
Some of us feel very blessed to have avoided the historically frequent shortening of life that war brings on the young. How much more blessed the believer who realises that death itself has been subject to defeat in Jesus; that the sons of time can be the children of eternity in him.
So there you have it.
The unpalatable human fact that every single man and woman who served in the First World War died. On Sunday at the Cenotaph Isaac Watts version of Psalm 90 was sung . . . Time like an ever rolling stream bears all its sons away.
Some of us feel very blessed to have avoided the historically frequent shortening of life that war brings on the young. How much more blessed the believer who realises that death itself has been subject to defeat in Jesus; that the sons of time can be the children of eternity in him.
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