On this day each year, we try and remember what has been good in our journey as a country. The entrance of Europeans into this land was good and bad. It was good from the standpoint that it gave a place of religious freedom to those who were oppressed where they came from; it was a problem for the people who already lived here, who found that their land was slowly being taken from them, and they and their values and their way of life weren’t necessarily being incorporated into this new land.
As immigrants would continue to come to this land, they would struggle to make a go of it, and they did so because of their own courage, their own conviction, their own values. They built up, through hard work, a nation, prosperity, things they did not know in the lands that they came from. They built up so many things that are biblical. The sense of a concern for one another; that even though there was competition, there was also often one nationality taking under its wing another, helping them to make their way, helping them to find their place, helping them to establish themselves, building up slowly the fabric of a country, built upon the hope for freedom.
We still hope for this freedom, and we still work to build it up, and we celebrate what we have accomplished so far, what God has accomplished through us.
Our greatness as a country is in our vulnerability to one another and to our world. It is to be found in our weakness, where God has the opportunity to work, God has the opportunity to weave, God has the opportunity to create anew. Today we celebrate our own independence, the right to not just exercise our own freedom, but to make it available to all.
It is not a feast, a celebration, that is about us individually. It’s a celebration about us collectively, and when we see ourselves collectively, what we can achieve through the freedom that we won over and over and over again. This is a celebration of all that is best in us, which requires an acceptance of all that is not. And in owning all that is not, to transform it. God is at work in us, and for that, we give thanks.
--Fr. Patrick Michaels,
Homily, July 4, 2025
Image source: https://daily.jstor.org/celebrating-immigration-on-the-fourth-of-july/







