
Straight Answers: Take Time to Thank God on
Thanksgiving
By Fr. William P. Saunders Herald Columnist
(From the issue of 11/25/04)
Recently, I had an argument with a friend over whether Thanksgiving
was a civil holiday or a religious holiday. What do you think? — A reader in
McLean
Thanksgiving is definitely a religious holiday rooted in the
Judeo-Christian tradition of our country. Although the secularism of our
present culture may have turned the focus more to feasting, football and
family gathering, we must not forget the history and the religious
significance of this American holiday.
Actually, the first Thanksgiving Day observance originated in Virginia.
On Dec. 4, 1619, 38 English settlers arrived at Berkeley Plantation on the
James River near present Charles City. The settlement's charter required
that the day of arrival be commemorated as a day of thanksgiving to Almighty
God.
Most Americans, however, immediately associate our thanksgiving
celebration with the Pilgrims and their journey across the Atlantic on the
Mayflower in search of a new land and religious freedom. After their
perilous journey and with little food and supplies left, they arrived on
Nov. 21, 1620, at Plymouth, Mass. During their first year, the Pilgrims
endured many hardships and nearly half of the original 100 settlers died.
Fortunately, the native Indians befriended the Pilgrims. Squanto, who
learned English from traders, not only showed the Pilgrims how to grow and
grind corn, and how to hunt and fish in the new land, he assisted in
negotiating a treaty with Chief Massasoit of the Wampanoag Indians. Gov.
William Bradford, remarked that Squanto was " ... a special instrument sent
of God for their good beyond their expectations." Near the time of the first
anniversary of their arrival, Gov. Bradford declared a day of prayer and
thanksgiving to God. About 60 pilgrims were joined by 90 Indians for this
celebration. The tradition continued and spread throughout the New England
colonies, although no official date of celebration was set until later.
However, we must not forget that the Pilgrims were well steeped in the
Bible. Gov. Bradford's idea for a celebration of thanksgiving was inspired
by the Hebrew Feast of Tabernacles, one of Israel's three major feasts, also
known as the Feast of Ingathering or Booths. This feast was celebrated on
the 15th day of month of Tishri (mid-October, five days after the Day of
Atonement, Yom Kippur) at the end of the harvest. The feast lasted one week,
during which time the people refrained from work and recited the "saving
deeds" of God from the Torah. They remembered their desert journey from
Egypt where they had been slaves and their safe deliverance to the promised
land.
For the Pilgrims, they must have seen the connection between their own
exodus with that of the Jewish people: the flight from the land of
persecution; the perilous journey through a wilderness; the divine
protection of God who provided food, water, safety; and the settlement in
the promised land.
As Catholics, we too must not forget how our own religion was outlawed
and persecuted in England at this time. On Nov. 22, 1633, a group of 300
colonists (one-third of whom were Catholic) set sail from Yarmouth harbor to
establish the new colony of Maryland, where religious freedom for all people
would be allowed. When they arrived at St. Clement's Island on March 25,
1634, Father Andrew White, S.J., celebrated a Mass of Thanksgiving, the
first Mass in the English colonies. (Remember the word Eucharist
means "thanksgiving.") They also were befriended by the native Indians of
the Piscataway and Yoacomaco tribes. Interestingly, these tribes believed in
one true God and offered a thanksgiving ritual of first fruits at their
harvest time. The Maryland colonists would continue to offer thanksgiving
festivals.
After the Revolutionary War, at the request of Congress, President George
Washington declared that Thursday, Nov. 26, 1789, would be for the people of
the United States a day of thanksgiving: "As a day of public thanksgiving
and prayer to be observed by acknowledging with grateful hearts the many and
single favors of Almighty God." The declaration exhorted the people to
"beseech Him to pardon our national and other transgressions, to promote the
knowledge and practice of true religion and virtue, and to grant unto all
mankind such a degree of temporal prosperity as He alone knows to be best."
Gradually, the celebration of Thanksgiving became a more national and
permanent event. In 1789, the Protestant Episcopal Church declared the first
Thursday of November as an annual day of thanksgiving to Almighty God. Since
1817, New York State has officially celebrated Thanksgiving Day. By 1859,
the custom of Thanksgiving Day had spread to 28 states and two territories.
(Virginia was the first Southern state to institute the holiday.) In 1863,
President Lincoln designated the last Thursday of November nationally "as a
day of thanksgiving and praise to our beneficent Father." President Johnson
in 1867 and President Grant in 1870 continued the practice. The fourth
Thursday of November would continue as the national day of Thanksgiving
until 1939, when President Franklin Roosevelt moved it one week earlier to
help businesses by lengthening the Christmas shopping period. Finally, in
1941, Congress legislated that Thanksgiving would be observed on the fourth
Thursday of November and would be a federal holiday.
As we celebrate this great American custom this year, we must not forget
God. We should pause this Thanksgiving Day and take time to pray, reflect on
our lives and give thanks. Each Catholic should make a real effort to attend
Mass and come to the Banquet of our Lord to lift up our hearts in
Thanksgiving and to receive Him in the Holy Eucharist. Yes, we give thanks
for the gifts of faith, Church and sacraments. We give thanks for the loved
ones who are entrusted to our care and those who care for us. We give thanks
for our country, which has provided such great opportunities, security and
peace. In all, we give thanks and rejoice in the Lord who has blessed each
of us with so much and in so many ways. To all the readers of Straight
Answers, may the Lord bless you and all your loved ones this
Thanksgiving Day!
Fr. Saunders is pastor of Our Lady of Hope Parish in Potomac Falls and a
professor of catechetics and theology at Notre Dame Graduate School in
Alexandria.
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