Encouraged by the outpouring of support from across the country, Grant, who was a Methodist, wrote in 1884:
“I believe in the Holy Scriptures, and whoso lives by them will be benefited thereby. Men may differ as to the interpretation, which is human, but the Scriptures are man’s best guide …
I did not go riding yesterday, although invited and permitted by my physicians, because it was the Lord’s day, and because I felt that if a relapse should set in, the people who are praying for me would feel that I was not helping their faith by riding out on Sunday …
Yes, I know, and I feel very grateful to the Christian people of the land for their prayers in my behalf. There is no sect or religion, as shown in the Old or New Testament, to which this does not apply.”
When I was in high school, I remember my history teacher lecturing in a way that caused me to think of Anne Boleyn as a living woman, then making her death so tragic and real. When I started reading Ulysses S.Grant: Union General and 18th President on wethekids.us website, I had that same interest in him, a living man that loved, fought, rose in the ranks, important in his role as leader for President Lincoln’s vision. I’m so glad that there are people today who value our American History