Tag Archives: Harry Truman

Presidential Prayer Team; J.R. – Brainpower Not Obligatory

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Who was America’s most intelligent president? That’s a matter of conjecture and involves a good deal of personal opinion, but whenever the question is debated, rarely does anyone ever mention Harry Truman. He didn’t attend college, in marked contrast to his predecessor Franklin Delano Roosevelt, a Harvard and Columbia prodigy with vast brainpower. Truman was often called “the little man from Missouri,” which was meant to denigrate more than his physical stature. Biographer David McCullough writes that Truman “knew he had no exceptional intellectual prowess,” and recounts him telling a colleague, “I am not a deep thinker as you are.”

O simple ones, learn prudence; O fools, learn sense.

Proverbs 8:5

But Truman, historians now recognize, was tremendously effective. He rose at five a.m. every morning, he didn’t pass the buck, he made the difficult decisions, and never pretended to be someone he wasn’t.

It doesn’t require a genius to follow the guidance of the Proverbs. Prudence, good sense, caution, honesty, and hard work are traits available to anyone, including you. The Lord will effectively use whatever you have. On Truman’s first day in office, he started by asking Americans to pray for him. As you lift up your modern-day leaders, pray they, too, will recognize what – and Who – is essential to success.

Recommended Reading: I Peter 4:7-11

Presidential Prayer Team; J.R. – Contain Your Crowing

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November 2, 1948 was a disastrous day for the media. Most of the newspapers had predicted Thomas Dewey would defeat Harry Truman decisively in the presidential election. The Chicago Tribune even went to press with the banner headline “Dewey Defeats Truman.”

It does not rejoice in wrongdoing, but rejoices with the truth.

I Corinthians 13:6

Later, in a good-natured mea culpa, the Washington Press Corp invited Truman to a “Crow Banquet,” in which all of the media representatives would be served crow en gl⣥ while Truman received turkey. In response, the President wrote back that he had “no desire to crow over anybody or see anybody eat crow figuratively or otherwise. We should all get together now and make a country in which everybody can eat turkey whenever he pleases.”

To be a loving Christian as Scripture requires, you must not rejoice in the wrongs of others – even when their wrongdoing is a personal affront to you. Love, Corinthians says, “bears all things.” Today, instead of crowing over your successes, acknowledge that they are really God’s…not yours. And as for those who were wrong and wronged you, recognize your priceless opportunity to reflect the grace and forgiveness of the Savior. America and her leaders need this type of example more than ever before!

Recommended Reading: Romans 12:14-21