Many of these everyday heroes are in Iraq right now. We only hear about them when there is an attack, or when something goes wrong. But there is a lot of good that they are doing. I was talking to my neighbor the other day. Her brother, Billy, is in Iraq. “A month ago he was shot at. I didn’t think he would be in the middle of the action,” said my neighbor, who is an elementary school teacher. She says she gets “very quiet inside” while leading the pledge of allegiance every morning. “Sometimes they even play “God Bless America” and wow do I have to fight the tears.” Still, she remains supportive of the troops stationed in Iraq. “My brother says that morale is mostly high because the soldiers feel they are doing what they were trained to do. ‘We want to be here. This is what we have trained for our entire lives,’ he said in a recent email. That part doesn’t get reported. He talks about how the Iraqi children follow them around and look up to the American soldiers.” This is an everyday hero. He deserves to be celebrated, and not just when there is an attack.

Let’s remember the children who come from broken homes, surrounded by crime, drugs, temptation, their peers having babies out of wedlock, but who still manage to get a good education despite the many obstacles they face every day. They still find a way to distinguish right from wrong and make a strong contribution to society.

One last thought on the everyday hero. We tend to admire the people in our society who have accumulated such wealth as to seem somehow great. But we shouldn’t forget that it was the everyday working class man who made this country great. Indeed, in The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism, sociologist Max Weber chronicles how the Protestant work ethic was the embryo of America’s capitalist spirit and was consequently sewn into our national identity. Advances in medicine, electricity and computer technology—all the wondrous developments that mark the progress of a great nation—are in a sense only end products. For the raw material that birthed these developments, we must look back to a particular spirit that characterized this country--the Protestant ethic.

It is this spirit which has marched across the American continent, outliving any particular individual and propelling this country forward. The Protestant ethic gave shape to our innovation. This ethic lives on in the countless everyday heroes who work hard and take care of their family. You won’t see them on the evening news. But there is no doubt that the working class man makes America great.