Friday, November 25, 2011

Happy Thanksgiving





Correction of a typographical error in the Sarah Hale quote.


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Happy Thanksgiving!

This week we celebrate a uniquely American holiday – Thanksgiving.

While thanksgiving celebrations occurred in North America as early as 1541, our current celebration is generally modeled after the one at Plymouth, Massachusetts in 1621. The Pilgrims, having survived their first winter (during which about half of them died), invited their local Indian friends to join with them in several days of religious activities, feasting, and athletic competition.

Thanksgiving became a festival celebrated annually across New England but did not spread to all the colonies until the American Revolution, when the Continental Congress called for official days of thanksgiving and prayer.

The first federal Thanksgiving proclamation was issued by President George Washington in 1789. Why would he issue that proclamation? He explained:

"It is the duty of all nations to acknowledge the providence of Almighty God, to obey His will, to be grateful for His benefits, and humbly to implore His protection and favor."

Over the next 80 years, national thanksgiving celebrations occurred only sporadically, although they were still celebrated annually across New England.

Beginning in the 1840s, Sarah Hale, a mother of five children and an editor of Godey’s Lady’s Book persistently campaigned for an established national Thanksgiving – such as in this editorial from 1852:


"The American people have two peculiar festivals, each connected with their history and therefore of great importance in giving power and distinctness to their nationality. The Fourth of July Is the exponent of independence and civil freedom. Thanksgiving Day is the national pledge of Christian faith in God, acknowledging Him as the dispenser of blessings. These two festivals should be joyfully and universally observed throughout our whole country, and thus incorporated in our habits of thought as inseparable from American life."

She faithfully contacted various presidents with that request. Finally, in 1863, President Abraham Lincoln issued a national Thanksgiving proclamation in response to her letter to him.


Subsequent presidents followed Lincoln’s example in setting aside a day of Thanksgiving, but it was not until 1941 that Congress passed a law establishing Thanksgiving as an official national holiday to be celebrated every year on the Fourth Thursday in November.

As you celebrate Thanksgiving this year with your family and friends, take time to reflect on all the reasons you have to be truly thankful – take time to thank God and specifically recall to Him some of His many blessings on us. You might even outline your prayer to Him by the four items George Washington mentioned in America’s original federal Thanksgiving proclamation:

"Acknowledge the providence of Almighty God;
Obey His will;
Be grateful for His benefits; and
Humbly implore His protection and favor."

You can also share with others the history of and the reason for this great holiday. There are several resources on our website that you might find helpful:

See Thanksgiving Proclamations issued by the Continental Congress in 1777, 1781, 1782, and many other historic proclamations.

Learn more about the history of this holiday. (Search our website for more articles, including Celebrating Thanksgiving in America.)

Read the 1795 Thanksgiving Sermon by the Rev. Thomas Baldwin in response to George Washington’s call for a Day of Thanksgiving.

From all of us at WallBuilders, we wish you and your family a very blessed and happy Thanksgiving!


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Monday, November 14, 2011

We Have To Stop Cutting Down The Trees

Russian-Bar Acrobatic

The 2003 International Circus Festival of Monte-Carlo featured the Acrobatic
Troupe of Shanghai. They performed a Russian Bar routine. The Russian Bar
combines balance and aerial gymnastics. It's an amazing display of both. The
word "amazing" really doesn't capture what these people do. Had I not seen
it, I would have thought it impossible. And it won SECOND place!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PRJxJdgc4Ng&feature=player_embedded

Tuesday, November 1, 2011

Halloween

Another Halloween has come and gone, It came in with a whimper in spite of the fascination and excitement of many children and fizzled on the way out.

At 700 PM I went out and looked up and down the streets and there were just a few homes with their lights on. I was taken back to the 70’s and 80’s when my wife and I took our son’s out all dressed up in their costumes which their mother created. Then I thought even further back to the 50’s when I was out “trick or treating.” The streets were full kids running, full of excitement, talking and laughing, having a great time. Last night our first scary little visitors came at 645 PM, the last at 830 PM. They were dressed from little angels to a military sniper escorted by his father in uniform. The total was a whopping 53.

I realize it’s not the same world as back then but must we flush ALL our traditions? Today’s parents have forgotten what it was like to be a child and/or are to damn cheap to buy a couple of large bags of candy at Costco to pass out, I give three to a child. A few hours one night out of the year should not be that difficult to turn on your lights and bring happiness to children.