Two Flags in My Heart: A Cherokee Reflection on America's 250th Birthday
As America commemorates the 250th anniversary of its founding, Joshua Hopping explores one of the most personal and emotionally complex holidays of the year.
As both an American patriot and a citizen of the Cherokee Nation, Joshua reflects on what it means to celebrate a nation whose birth represents both liberty and loss. Through his own family history—one ancestor who fought for American independence and another who likely fought alongside the British in defense of Cherokee sovereignty—he examines the American Revolution from two very different perspectives.
In this episode of Fractured Faith, Joshua explores the often-overlooked role of Native nations during the Revolutionary era, the struggle over western lands that helped shape the nation's founding, the Declaration of Independence's infamous reference to "merciless Indian Savages," and the long road to freedom experienced by Native Americans and African Americans long after 1776.
Rather than rejecting America's founding ideals, Joshua asks a more difficult question: Freedom for whom? He wrestles with the tension of loving his country while acknowledging that the promises of liberty were not extended equally to all people. The result is an honest conversation about patriotism, historical memory, justice, and hope—one that seeks neither to condemn nor to romanticize America's past, but to tell the truth about it.
Whether you approach the Fourth of July with celebration, sorrow, or a mixture of both, this episode invites listeners to consider how history, faith, and identity shape our understanding of freedom—and why telling the whole story matters.
Additional Resources
The following books, articles, and historical resources provide additional context for many of the topics discussed in this episode:
- First America podcast [https://www.pushkin.fm/podcasts/first-americ] by Rebecca Nagle
- A People's History of the United States [https://amzn.to/4glP5i8] by Howard Zin (affiliate link)
- How to Hide an Empire [https://amzn.to/4vQSESm]by Daniel Immerwahr (affiliate link)
- An Indigenous Peoples' History of the United States [https://amzn.to/3T0CvuO] by Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz (affiliate link)