Thanksgiving in the United States

Four hundred years ago, the Puritan settlers of Massachusetts had much to be thankful for. They had survived a severe first winter which had killed most of the first settlers of their colony. They were befriended by the neighboring Wampanoag tribe, who fed them, taught them how to hunt, fish and plant successfully in their new home and with whom they made a treaty to defend them against their enemies. The treaty was honored by both sides for a generation, which allowed the colony to establish itself, grow and thrive.

To thank God for these blessings, they invited their new friends to a feast. It was the first of many such feasts of thanksgiving, which Puritans would have after any great blessing. Other colonies in the United States would periodically celebrate days of thanksgiving, particularly at harvest time in October and November. The first nationwide day of thanksgiving was declared by George Washington on November 26, 1789 to thank God for establishing and blessing the new nation. The date of thanksgiving celebrations varied from state to state, when in 1863, President Abraham Lincoln fixed the national day of thanksgiving on the last Sunday of November. In 1939, President Franklin Roosevelt experimented with moving the date to the second last Thursday in November. In 1941, he signed legislation which fixed the date of Thanksgiving on fourth Thursday in November.

Today Thanksgiving is increasingly a family event, where families gather from across the country to eat a big dinner together, watch football games on TV and go shopping for Christmas gifts the Friday following, known as Black Friday, when many American businesses show a profit for the first time. It is the unofficial day that the Christmas season begins in the United States.

Many Americans have completely lost track of the purpose of the day to thank God for his blessings. Christian churches, however, still conduct services of thanksgiving on Wednesday and Thursday. We remember the source of our blessings and ones most Americans do not remember — that our Lord Jesus took our sins upon himself, bore them to the cross where he suffered and died to pay their price, rose again to break the seal of the grave forever and in Holy Baptism, made us his own. Now at the end of our days or the end of all days, he will return to bring us home to live with him forever. Then at his return, the Great Day of Thanksgiving will begin, when he brings an end to sin and death forever, casts Satan and his forces into hell forever, raise us from our graves, transform us to be like him and live with us forever. So, give thanks to the Lord, for he is good and his mercy endures forever and ever.

©2021 Robert E. Smith. All rights reserved. Permission granted to copy, share and display freely for non-commercial purposes. Direct all other rights and permissions inquiries to cosmithb@gmail.com

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