We can identify with Abraham's...
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We can identify with Abraham's doubting that God would fulfill his promises. Yet at length we have to say, "God help us."
Captain Ted W. Lawson was one of the B-25 pilots led by Jimmy Doolittle who bombed Tokyo on April 18, 1942, just months after the Japanese had bombed Pearl Harbor, December 7, 1941, without warning. Strangely enough, the attack occurred just as a radio broadcast was saying that Japan could not be bombed. Lawson went on to China, but he lost a leg eventually from when his plane crashed. Lawson made it back to the U.S. and in 1943 Penguin Books printed his book, Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo.
Lawson in his dedication mentions 10 of the B-25 crews who did not make it back. He mentions six lieutenants. My recollection is that several of these were illegally executed instead of being treated by the Japanese as prisoners of war. Lawson writes, "They didn't get back. God help them." The last Corporal mentioned is Jacob Deshazer. Rather than be embittered forever at the Japanese for their treatment during his imprisonment, Deshazer decided to give his life as a Methodist missionary to the Japanese. You may have seen his story on the A&E TV channel. "God help them." God did!
- Richardson
Captain Ted W. Lawson was one of the B-25 pilots led by Jimmy Doolittle who bombed Tokyo on April 18, 1942, just months after the Japanese had bombed Pearl Harbor, December 7, 1941, without warning. Strangely enough, the attack occurred just as a radio broadcast was saying that Japan could not be bombed. Lawson went on to China, but he lost a leg eventually from when his plane crashed. Lawson made it back to the U.S. and in 1943 Penguin Books printed his book, Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo.
Lawson in his dedication mentions 10 of the B-25 crews who did not make it back. He mentions six lieutenants. My recollection is that several of these were illegally executed instead of being treated by the Japanese as prisoners of war. Lawson writes, "They didn't get back. God help them." The last Corporal mentioned is Jacob Deshazer. Rather than be embittered forever at the Japanese for their treatment during his imprisonment, Deshazer decided to give his life as a Methodist missionary to the Japanese. You may have seen his story on the A&E TV channel. "God help them." God did!
- Richardson
