Prayers and Thanksgiving
It is with curious timing that our Governor, Sonny Purdue, would call for an official prayer service to petition the Almighty for rain to fall upon our parched land. Many have taken issue with the Governor, calling his actions everything from foolish to unconstitutional. However, it is interesting to note as we approach Thanksgiving Day how often in our nation’s history political leaders have publicly “called upon the name of the Lord.”
On December 26, 1941, President Roosevelt signed a resolution
permanently establishing the fourth Thursday of each November as a national
holiday. For the previous 79 years, beginning in 1863, our nation had
celebrated an unofficial Thanksgiving Day on the last Thursday in November.
President Lincoln began this tradition, which Presidents following him
continued, by declaring, “We often
forget the Source from which the blessings of fruitful years and healthful
skies come. . . . No human wisdom hath devised nor hath any mortal hand worked
out these great things. They are the gracious gifts of the Most
High God. . . . I therefore invite my fellow-citizens in every part of
the
According to historian David
Barton, the first national Thanksgiving occurred in 1789. In September of that
year, immediately after approving the Bill of Rights, Congress delivered a
resolution to President Washington requesting, “that
he would recommend to the people of the
In 1777 the
Continental Congress called for a day of thanksgiving and praise, “so that
the people may express the grateful feelings of their
hearts . . . and join . . . their prayers that it may please God, through the
merits of Jesus Christ, to forgive our sins and . . . to enlarge His kingdom
which consists in righteousness, peace and joy in the Holy Ghost.”
On October 23, 1871
President Ulysses S. Grant recommended that on
Thursday, the 30th day of November, “the people meet in their respective places of worship, and there make
the usual acknowledgments to Almighty God for the blessings he has conferred
upon them; for their merciful exemption from evil, and invoke His protection
and kindness for their less fortunate brethren whom, in His wisdom he has
deemed it best to chastise.”
Of
course, governmental calls for prayer, petition, and thanksgiving have by no
means been limited to a day in November. In 1799 President John Adams called
for a national Fast Day, requesting that citizens, “abstain, as far as may be, from their secular occupation, and devote
the time to the sacred duties of religion… that they call to mind our numerous
offenses against the most high God, confess them before Him with sincerest
penitence…that He would make us deeply sensible that ‘righteousness exalts a
nation, but sin is a disgrace to any people’ (Proverbs 14:34).”
In 1988
Ronald Reagan signed the bill into law that declared the first Thursday of each
May to be recognized as a National Day of Prayer. On the inaugural date he
proclaimed: “Let us, young and old, join
together, as did the First Continental Congress, in the first step—humble,
heartfelt prayer. Let us do so for the Love of God and His great goodness, in
search of His guidance, and the grace of repentance…”
As
governors, Thomas Jefferson in
Enduring this
drought ought to remind us all how thankful we should be toward our Creator for
all that He provides. When the Pilgrims celebrated the first Thanksgiving in
October of 1621, they had endured many hardships. In just about one year’s
time, nearly half (47) of their original number had died. Through their many
difficulties they still found cause to thank and praise God. The Pilgrims
understood well that God truly provided them with everything that they needed. May
we be of the same mindset this Thanksgiving Day.
Copyright 2007,
Trevor Grant Thomas