God's Roadmap

Now may the Lord Jesus Christ and our Father God, who loved us and in his wonderful grace gave us eternal comfort and a beautiful hope that cannot fail, encourage your hearts and inspire you with strength to always do and speak what is good and beautiful in his eyes (2 Thessalonians 2:16-17 TPT).


Thursday, June 25, 2026

What Can Our Ancestors Teach Us About History? - Guest Post by Dr. Rebecca Price Janney

 

by Barbara Latta @barbaralatta 

This week's post is by Dr. Rebecca Price Janney. She has written a six-book series set in the Revolutionary War period of America. The main character in all these books is actually an ancestor of hers. As a person whose favorite part of history is this Revolutionary period, I learned a lot about some of the battles and hardships our founding fathers experienced. Travel back in time through these books and you will have more to appreciate as we celebrate our 250th birthday. She has also written two books about the Great Awakening in the early 1900's in Korea and the Korean War. Since we lived in Korea for two years, I found these novels fascinating. I think you will too! Welcome, Rebecca. Links to her books are at the end of the post.

             Four years ago, I got to address a group of newly-naturalized citizens from around the world. Most of them were with family members and wore big smiles to go with their American flags. What could I say to encourage and welcome them? Since I believe my family’s story reflects “the American dream,” I went with some of the details before bringing my journey to bear upon theirs.

On my mother’s side, I trace my ancestors back to cousins who literally “came over on the Mayflower,” as well as Mennonites who arrived in Pennsylvania in 1683. William Penn had promised those German and Swiss Christians they would be free to practice their faith in his colony, apart from government harassment. One of those ancestors signed America’s first anti-slavery document. A few decades later, my Swiss and German Reformed relatives also immigrated to pursue religious freedom as well as to take their God-given talents as far as they could in the New World. During the American Revolution, several of my many times great grandfathers pledged their lives, their fortunes, and their sacred honor to achieve independence from Great Britain. One of them, Colonel Peter Kichline, had served as Northampton County’s Sheriff for two terms in the 1760s and 70s, then commanded its “Flying Camp” at the August 1776 Battle of Brooklyn. Although he lost most of his regiment, was wounded, captured and imprisoned by the British, his small band of farmers and tradesmen, who didn’t even have proper uniforms, bravely stood their ground against overwhelming numbers of British and Hessians. Their actions helped General Washington to escape with his remaining army.

             Throughout America’s history, my mother’s family has been involved in most of its wars, including those who fought at Chancellorsville and Gettysburg, in France during World War I, on the home front and in the Pacific during World War II. When she was still in high school, my mother took a defense job as a Rosie the Riveter, and her sister joined the WAVES. My cousins wore the uniform during the Korean and Vietnam Wars. Throughout American history, my mother’s family has had “skin in the game.”

            The American Dream looked different for my dad’s family, but also incorporated faith, patriotism, and sacrificial service. Like millions of others in the late 1800s and early 1900s, they came through Ellis Island. My Italian grandfather got here just before World War I only to find himself separated from his wife and baby girl until the conflict ended. Back in his home country, my grandfather had worked on an estate as a gardener, but in America, he worked in a gritty foundry to provide for his family. At home, however, his green thumb created beauty, climbing roses to grace and perfume their front porch, flowers and vegetable beds along the walkway and in the back yard. I remember the fig tree he lovingly tended to, wrapping it like a mummy every fall to protect it from harsh winter weather.

My grandmother attended Mass every day, walking to and from church in weather fair and foul because she neither she nor my grandfather learned how to drive. When World War II broke out, three of their sons answered Uncle Sam’s call. One of my uncles nearly lost his life in the European fighting, and my father stormed the beaches of Normandy during the D-Day Invasion. The following year, he helped liberate Dachau.

           When I finished my speech to the new citizens, I told them, “This may be my story, but today, now that you are citizens, it has become yours as well. All of our nation’s rich narratives now belong to you.”

How does your family fit into the framework of American history? Are you most like my mom’s side that’s been here since the start, or are your ancestors more recent arrivals like my dad’s parents? Either way, your family stories are woven into the fabric of the American story.

America is unique in that our history isn’t about kings or queens and the way they dominated their people, whether for good or ill. Although they sometimes clashed over the finer points of their vision for America, Thomas Jefferson and John Adams labored to create a country where all people are created equal and endowed by their Creator with certain inalienable rights. The United States Constitution begins with “We the people.” America’s story is the people’s story, people like your ancestors and mine, ordinary people who, with God’s help, forged an exceptional nation.

This is our moment in its 250-year history, our time to carry the torch into the future. We are America’s heirs of freedom.

How will you observe America's 250th birthday? Does Rebecca's article inspire you to research your ancestors? Join the conversation and share your thoughts.

This is our moment in America's 250-year history, our time to carry the torch into the future. We are America’s heirs of freedom.(click to share on X) 


A popular speaker for civic and patriotic organizations, churches, synagogues, women’s retreats, writing conferences, and schools, Rebecca also appears on radio and TV.  She’s a graduate of Lafayette College and Princeton Theological Seminary, and she received her doctorate from Missio Seminary, where she focused on the role of women in American history. She lives with her husband, son, and Cavalier King Charles Spaniel in Pennsylvania’s Lehigh Valley. Theirs is a Revolutionary family—Rebecca and her husband are descended from several Patriots. (Their dog probably would have been a Loyalist.) Visit her website at https://rebeccapricejanney.com/ 

The Easton six-book series https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0C4TWHR5R?binding=paperback 

Heirs of Freedom series 

Image by Don White from Pixabay











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