Pastor Rick Jackson
I. AMERICAN THANKSGIVING [The Origins
of Thanksgiving from www.christianlaw.org]
1. The Pilgrims
Americans
are beginning to forget the important origins of our national Thanksgiving
holiday. Its spiritual significance is no longer taught in our nation’s public
schools. In fact, most school children today are taught that Thanksgiving
originated when the Pilgrims invited their Indian friends to dinner to thank
them for providing sustenance after the Mayflower landed. As with much of
modern American revisionist history, there really is much more to the story.
Coming to America
The Atlantic
crossing in the fall of 1620 had been an extremely difficult journey for the
Pilgrims. For two months, 102 people were wedged into what was called the
“tween decks” of the Mayflower—the ship’s cargo space with only about
five-and-a-half feet of headroom. No one was allowed above deck because of the
terrible storms. This was no pleasure trip.
The Pilgrims
comforted themselves on their journey by singing from the Book of Psalms. This
“noise” irritated one of the ship’s paid crewmembers. He told the Pilgrims he
was looking forward to throwing their corpses overboard after they succumbed to
the routine illnesses common on such voyages. As it turned out, this crewmember
himself was the only person to die on the voyage and be thrown overboard.
God
providentially protected His own people. A little-known fact about the
Mayflower is that this ship normally carried a cargo of wine; and the wine
spillage from previous voyages had soaked the beams, acting as a disinfectant
to prevent the spread of disease.
During one
terrible storm, the main beam of the mast cracked. Death was certain if this
beam could not be repaired. At that moment, the whole Pilgrim adventure could
very easily have ended on the bottom of the Atlantic Ocean. Providentially, the
Pilgrims had with them a large iron printing press screw. That screw repaired
the beam, saving the ship and all on board.
“Land Ho!”
After
sixty-six days at sea, land was sighted off Cape Cod, Massachusetts, not the
place these Pilgrims wanted to be. They intended to establish their new colony
in the northern parts of Virginia (which then extended to the Hudson River in
modern-day New York), but two factors interrupted their plans. The winds had
blown them off course, yes; but they later learned that other Englishmen who
wanted to settle in the same part of Virginia had actually bribed the ship’s
crew to land them farther north.
Despite this
chicanery, God was in charge and the Pilgrims landed exactly where God wanted
them to be. Had they actually made landfall near the Hudson River, they most
certainly would have been immediately attacked by hostile Indians. Instead,
they arrived at the one spot along the coast where hostile Indians had been
providentially removed from the land.
Many years
before the Mayflower journey, local Indians had captured a Frenchman on a
fishing expedition to that region. Just as they were about to kill him, the
Frenchman warned them God would be angry, would destroy them all, and would
replace them with another nation. The Indians boastfully replied that his God
could never kill them. Yet, a year or two before the Pilgrims arrived in this
very same region, nearly all the native inhabitants had been wiped out by a
plague.
Help Arrives
Despite this
miraculous provision of safety from hostile Indians, the Pilgrims barely
survived their first winter on the Cape. Only four families remained intact;
but God was still faithful. In the spring of 1621, He sent Squanto, an
English-speaking Indian who offered to teach the Pilgrims how to survive in
this strange new land.
Squanto was
one of only a few local Indians who escaped the plague. He had been captured as
a young man and taken to England as a slave. During that time he mastered the
English language. When he was freed, he returned to his native territory on the
Cape shortly before the Pilgrims arrived. Probably the most important thing
Squanto taught the Pilgrims was how to plant the native winter staple
crop--corn.
The Pilgrims
thanked God for this wonderful helper. They also repaid Squanto by sharing with
him the most valuable treasure they had brought with them from England—the
Gospel. Squanto died a year or two after coming to the aid of the Pilgrims, but
before his death he asked them to pray with him that he might go to be with
their God in Heaven.
Peace and Thankfulness
Squanto
introduced other Indians to the Pilgrims, and these Indians were also impressed
with the Pilgrims’ God. During the summer of 1621, it appeared the year’s corn
harvest would not survive a severe drought. The Pilgrims responded by calling
for a day of fasting and prayer. By the end of the day, it was raining. The
rain saved the corn, which miraculously sprang back to life.
One of the
Indians who observed this miracle remarked that the Pilgrims’ God must be a
very great God because when the Indians pow-wowed for rain, it always rained so
hard that the corn stalks were broken down. They noticed the Pilgrims’ God
acted differently by sending a very gentle rain that did not damage the corn
harvest.
It was that
miraculous corn harvest in 1621 that provided grain for the Pilgrims’ first
Thanksgiving meal with their Indian friends and helpers. The evidence of
history shows that on this first Thanksgiving Day, both the Pilgrims and
Indians thanked God for His great provision and for His goodness toward them
all.
Unlike other
Europeans who came to America, these Bible-believing Pilgrims were model
Christians in their dealings with the native populations. During their first
year on the Cape, Squanto, acting as a friend and interpreter, had assisted the
Pilgrims in negotiating an important peace treaty with Chief Massasoit, leader
of the nearby Wampanoag Indians. The two populations, Indian and Pilgrim, kept
that treaty of peace for more than fifty years.
2. The Presidents
The story of
Thanksgiving doesn’t end there. The holiday itself was not officially
celebrated until almost 170 years later, after the Revolutionary War had been
won and our American Constitution had been adopted. In 1789, Congress approved
the Bill of Rights, the first ten amendments to the Constitution. Congress then
“recommended a day of public thanksgiving and prayer” to thank God for blessing
America. President Washington declared November 26, 1789, as the first national
day of prayer and thanksgiving to the Lord.
Another 75
years later, after the Civil War ended, President Abraham Lincoln officially
established the last Thursday in November as a day to acknowledge “the gracious
gifts of the Most High God,” which He had bestowed on America. Every president
continued this tradition until 1941 when Congress officially made Thanksgiving
a national holiday.
3. The Perspective
Now that you
know the true story of Thanksgiving, this year make sure your children and
grandchildren learn it too. As America is currently facing serious challenges
both at home and abroad, let’s join together with countless generations before
us in giving thanks to God for blessing and preserving our nation. Let’s make
sure that all our children and grandchildren learn Whose hand of protection has
been on America; and let’s all pray that He will continue to bless and sustain
our nation as we continue to acknowledge and honor Him.
II. HEAVENLY THANKSGIVING
1. The Reasons for Heavenly Praise [Ps. 148:1-56]
2. Last Reference to Giving of Thanks [Revelation 11:16-17]
3. The Last Reference to Giving of
Praise [Revelation
19:5-6]
Technically as it
relates to God, "thanksgiving" is for what He has done, while
"Praise" is for Who He is!
III. EARTHLY THANKSGIVING
1. Should Be Sung
Nehemiah
12:46 For in the days of David and Asaph of old there were chief of the
singers, and songs of praise and thanksgiving unto God.
Psalm 69:30
I will praise the name of God with a song, and will magnify him with
thanksgiving.
Psalm 95:2
Let us come before his presence with thanksgiving, and make a joyful noise unto
him with psalms.
Psalm 147:7
Sing unto the LORD with thanksgiving; sing praise upon the harp unto our God:
Isaiah 51:3
For the LORD shall comfort Zion: he will comfort all her waste places; and he
will make her wilderness like Eden, and her desert like the garden of the LORD;
joy and gladness shall be found therein, thanksgiving, and the voice of melody.
2. Should be Spoken
Psalm 26:7 That I may publish with the voice of
thanksgiving, and tell of all thy wondrous works.
Psalm 100:4 Enter into his gates with
thanksgiving, and into his courts with praise: be thankful unto him, and bless
his name.
Psalm 107:22 And let them sacrifice the
sacrifices of thanksgiving, and declare his works with rejoicing.
Psalm 116:17 I will offer to thee the sacrifice
of thanksgiving, and will call upon the name of the LORD.
2 Corinthians 4:15 For all things are for your sakes,
that the abundant grace might through the thanksgiving of many redound to the
glory of God.
3. Should Be Shown
Psalm 50:14 Offer unto God thanksgiving; and pay
thy vows unto the most High:
Jonah 2:9 But I will sacrifice unto thee with
the voice of thanksgiving; I will pay that that I have vowed. Salvation is of
the LORD.
Philippians 4:6 Be careful for nothing; but in every
thing by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made
known unto God.
Colossians 2:7 Rooted and built up in him, and
stablished in the faith, as ye have been taught, abounding therein with
thanksgiving.
Colossians 4:2 Continue in prayer, and watch in the
same with thanksgiving;
1 Timothy 4:3 Forbidding to marry, and commanding
to abstain from meats, which God hath created to be received with thanksgiving
of them which believe and know the truth.
1 Timothy 4:4 For every creature of God is good,
and nothing to be refused, if it be received with thanksgiving:
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