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Thanksgiving Beatitudes

24 Nov

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Be thankful that youth don’t already have everything you desire. If you did, what would there be to look forward to?

Be thankful when you don’t know something, for it gives you the opportunity to learn.

Be thankful for the difficult times. During those times you grow.

Be thankful for your limitations, because they give you opportunities for improvement.

Be thankful for each new challenge, because it will build your strength and character.

Be thankful for your mistakes. They will teach you valuable lessons.

Be thankful when you’re tired and weary, because it means you’ve made a difference.

God calls his people to be a thankful people.

(Psalms 107:1 NIV) Give thanks to the LORD, for he is good; his love endures forever.

(Psalms 107:8-9 NIV) Let them give thanks to the LORD for his unfailing love and his wonderful deeds for men, {9} for he satisfies the thirsty and fills the hungry with good things.

(Psalms 107:21-22 NIV) Let them give thanks to the LORD for his unfailing love and his wonderful deeds for men. {22} Let them sacrifice thank offerings and tell of his works with songs of joy.

(Psalms 107:43 NIV) Whoever is wise, let him heed these things and consider the great love of the LORD.

(1 Thessalonians 5:16-18 NIV) Be joyful always; {17} pray continually; {18} give thanks in all circumstances, for this is God’s will for you in Christ Jesus.

Are you aware that as early as 1400 B.C. the Israelites had a day of thanksgiving that was ordained by Yahweh? It came fifty days after the beginning of the harvest and was known as Pentecost or the Feast of Weeks. By that time the grain had been harvested, the fruits gathered, and the olives pressed. In the midst of great rejoicing for the Lord’s goodness, men from every tribe in Israel — often accompanied by their entire families — made their way to Jerusalem for eight days of feasting.

As a matter of fact, one could make a case for saying that all three of Israel’s annual pilgrim feasts were thanksgiving festivals. Passover was certainly a time of thanksgiving to the Lord for his deliverance from Egypt in a great exodus of grace. It praised God for sparing the firstborn of Israel’s children when death was being visited on the Egyptians. And the Feast of Tabernacles was a joyous festival that remembered God’s faithfulness to Israel during forty years of wilderness wandering.

God is glorified in the thanksgiving of his people!

Our American Thanksgiving Day had its inception in 1621. When the Pilgrims crossed the Atlantic Ocean in 1620, they were not prepared for their new environment. They wheat they had brought from England would not grow in the rocky soil of New England. They needed to learn new ways for a new world. Without the help of a Native American named Squanto, that original group likely would not have survived. A member of the Pokanokit Wampanoag nation, he had gone to England fifteen years earlier with an English explorer named John Weymouth. While there, he learned to speak English.

Squanto returned to New England with Captain Weymouth and was later captured by a British slaver who raided his village and sold him to some Spanish settlers in the Caribbean islands. There a Franciscan priest befriended him, helped him get to Spain, and eventually to England. There he rejoined his friend Captain Weymouth, who arranged to get him back to New England.

By this circuitous route, Squanto and a friend found the Pilgrim group in the spring of 1621. They were in terrible condition. During the winter, half their number had died. The crops had been poor, and they were depending on wild game for meat. They were obviously desperate for help.

Squanto, who knew more English than any North American Indian of his time, chose to stay with the Pilgrims for several months to teach them how to survive in their new environment. He brought them deer meat and beaver skins. He taught them how to cultivate corn and other vegetables native to this continent. He taught them to dig and cook clams. He taught them how to get sap from maple trees. He showed them how to use fish for fertilizer. He taught them how to survive in their strange new environment.

In the fall of that same year — with conditions much improved at Plymouth — the Pilgrims determined to have a thanksgiving feast to celebrate God’s gracious providences to them. They had, after all, observed thanksgiving feasts in November as a religious obligation in England for many years before coming to the new world. Captain Miles Standish, the leader of the pilgrims, invited Squanto and two other Wampanoag leaders and their immediate families to join them. Those “immediate families” turned out to be around ninety relatives! Within the first hour, the leader of the Wampanoag, Massasoit, sent some of his men home for more food.

Supplying the majority of what was eaten, the group sat down to five deer, many wild turkeys, fish, beans, squash, cornbread, and berries. The feasted together for three days. The feast was quickly made an annual event among the Pilgrims.

Governor William Bradford posted this announcement “To All Ye Pilgrims” calling for a day of Thanksgiving in the year 1923: Inasmuch as the great Father has given us this year an abundant harvest of Indian corn, wheat, beans, squashes, and garden vegetables, and has made the forests to abound with game and the sea with fish and clams, and inasmuch as He has protected us from the ravages of the savages, has spared us from pestilence and disease, has granted us freedom to worship God according to the dictates of our own conscience; now, I, your magistrate, do proclaim that all ye Pilgrims, with your wives and little ones, do gather at ye meeting house, on ye hill, between the hours of 9 and 12 in the day time, on Thursday, November ye 29th of the year of our Lord one thousand six hundred and twenty-three, and the third year since ye Pilgrims landed on ye Pilgrim Rock, there to listen to ye pastor, and render thanksgiving to ye Almighty God for all His blessings.
An attitude of gratitude is still the most appropriate spirit for the children of God to exhibit in this world of stress, challenge, and heartache. It is the alternative to and cure for such ills as joylessness, despair, and cynicism. As one spiritual pilgrim to another, may I remind you that it is still a good thing for “all ye pilgrims” to give thanks to “ye Almighty God.”

So with drumstick in one hand and TV remote in the other this Thursday, don’t forget to give God the glory he deserves.

 
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Posted by on November 24, 2016 in Encouragement

 

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