Smoky
Mountain Reflections #186
About eight
years ago, I asked you what you were you thankful for, what those who started
the tradition of thanksgiving as we know it had to be thankful for, and whether
there was a common thread in their thankfulness. Let’s explore those questions
again.
Harvest
festivals and celebrations of the bounty of fall are common practices in the
history of most cultures. A simple
research of fall festivals reveals that Greeks, Romans, Chinese, Hebrews, and
Egyptians all had, and some continue to have, celebrations that are tied to
thankfulness for the great abundance that usually accompanies the harvest time
of year.
But if we
examine the history of the American holiday, we find a thankful spirit when
there was little to be thankful for, but much to be hopeful about.
• September
8th, 1565: 600 Spanish settlers held a
service of thanksgiving in Saint Augustine, Florida, after surviving months of
pain, suffering, and uncertainty while crossing the Atlantic. They were not thankful for their pain and
suffering, but for their deliverance from it and the hope for what lay ahead.
• December
4th, 1619: 38 English settlers
celebrated “a day of thanksgiving to almighty God”, a day to be kept holy by
their charter. Even though that settlement later became part of a plantation, a
day of thanksgiving is still celebrated on December 4th at that location. These cold, hungry, unsuccessful settlers
just north of Yorktown had little to be thankful for, but that did not stop
them from being thankful—not for their hardships, but for their deliverance
from them and hope of what lay ahead.
• Fall
1620: The suffering pilgrims of
Plymouth, Massachusetts survived due to the kindness of the Wampanoag Indians. They celebrated the first thanksgiving that
is the root of our holiday in the fall of 1621.
These suffering settlers who lost many loved ones in that first winter
had little to be thankful for, but that did not stop them from being thankful,
hard-working stewards who by 1623 had a very bountiful festival.
• November
26th, 1789: The first national day of
public thanksgiving and prayer was celebrated, after having been declared by
our first president in October of that year.
This young nation was not lamenting the losses due to starvation and
freezing and war that were suffered by many in the colonies throughout the
Revolutionary War. These bold patriots could have focused on their losses and
found they had little to be thankful for, but they pressed on with thankful
hearts, working hard to build a new country.
• October
3, 1863: President Abraham Lincoln
issued a proclamation calling for the observance of the fourth Thursday of
November as a national holiday. This
first Thanksgiving came in the midst of our nation’s only and most bloody civil
war. Were we thankful that brother was
killing brother and neighbor was killing neighbor? Of course not! Lincoln’s proclamation shows that just as
God’s word says, we can and should give thanks in every circumstance, no matter
how dark or bleak.
• November
1942 was the first time Thanksgiving was celebrated as a federal holiday
designated by an Act of Congress. Again,
our nation was in the middle of a world war.
Did Americans grieve over the loss of hundreds of thousands of their
countrymen? Yes, but they also celebrated Thanksgiving—sharing food, family,
and fellowship, and thanking God for His generosity.
• November
23rd, 2017: 452 years after that first thanksgiving in Saint
Augustine, Florida, we have a chance to worship and celebrate. The evening before, on November the 22nd,
we will have our Thanksgiving service, and on the 23rd, whether your
favorite thing is sleeping in, parades, pumpkin pie, turkey, football, or
anticipation over black Friday, remember this: all that you have and all that
you are is a gift from God. Take time to thank Him for all His blessings. Take
time to thank Him for the peace and comfort He provides through all your pain
and suffering. Take time to thank the
Creator of all that is for sending His Son to die on a cross so that you might
have peace and love in this life and assurance of peace and love for all
eternity.
That is the
common thread of thankfulness that permeates the history of thanksgiving. This is what all who came before us had to be
thankful for in the face of their trials and tribulations. That, my brothers and sisters in Christ, is
something to be very thankful for.
In Christ,
Pastor Portier
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