Sometime in the early morning of April 10, one of those gusts
snapped the 70-foot nylon rope that holds our flag on the tall aluminum pole in
front of the school. No one saw it happen; they only saw the line and Old Glory
strewn in a tangled mess below. This old rope that had weathered 14 winters
since the building was completed in 1999. During all those years, it had held
over twenty different U.S. flags, replaced routinely through the years, but the
rope itself was the same. Mostly the same, that is. Not all of it was worn, but
there were weak spots at friction points, and the strenuous winds of this day were
too much for one of those unnoticed frays in the old line.
Craig Morton, CCS parent and member of our armed forces, was doing
some volunteer tasks around the building that day when he saw the fallen flag.
He retrieved it, observing proper protocol, and offered to bring a boom-truck
to restring a new rope the following Saturday.
Mrs. Becky Smith, mother of
purple-heart Marine, Jared Smith (CCS Class of 2002), is our own in-house Betsy
Ross. She loves to sew and took the flag home to make sure it was clean,
repaired and ready to fly again.
Mrs. Deb Stenberg, staff sponsor of the
National Honor Society, learned of the need for a new rope and thought this
might make a good NHS project. She called her husband who works in the shipping
industry. He introduced us to AAA Sling
& Industrial Supply, Inc. of Grand Rapids, supplier of ropes for the
flagpoles and ships down at the Muskegon docks. Not only did AAA Sling &
Industrial Supply donate a new nylon rope to CCS, they also sent a steeple-jack
to climb the pole (without a lift) and restring the new 75-foot rope through
the top pulley about 40 feet above the ground. (We wish we had pictures of the
steeple-jack’s brave feat, but it was done after school when no one saw.)
It is easy to take for granted things like poles and ropes and
flags, and we never really think about the work it takes to fly a flag.
Worse yet, we sometimes forget the risk, courage, sacrifice and freedom the
flag represents. The years pass, the flag waves and weathers the storms; we are
safe in our homes and churches and schools, and we are lulled into false
security until unseen forces find our weak points, cause a line to break, and
lives or treasured things are strewn on the ground. Whether its Boston
or Benghazi we grieve when the worn lines snap, but we must never be afraid to fix what is frayed and hold high the ideals we share under God.
Our thanks to all who helped raise our building's flag again. May
we never forget the true cost of the freedom it represents, the Father who grants us that freedom... and the Son through whom we are made free indeed. (John 8:36)