Tomorrow we
celebrate Thanksgiving Day, and our thoughts go back to the first Thanksgiving
in Plymouth, Massachusetts. The
colonists had reason to celebrate. Their first winter in America was terrible
with nearly half of the people dying. The survivors rejoiced because their
situation was much different than the previous year. They understood their
circumstances much better and appreciated their good corn harvest and successful hunts.
Governor William Bradford decreed that December 13, 1621, would be a day for
feasting and expressions of gratitude.
Harold Hansen, a professor at Brigham Young University, described the celebration: “The women of the colony spent days preparing for
the feast. Foods were boiled, baked, and roasted. The children were kept very
busy turning roasts on spits or iron rods in front of the open fires. More than
eighty Indians attended the feast. The Indians brought wild turkeys and venison
as their share. The tables were set outdoors, and all the people sat around the
combined tables like one large family. Prayers, sermons, and songs of praise
accompanied the feasting. Three days were devoted to the Thanksgiving, and then
the Indians returned to the forests and the colonists to their toil.”
Thanksgiving is not only a time
for giving thanks, but it is also a time for the gathering of family and
friends and the strengthening of relationships. My family – all six children
and seventeen grandchildren – are together for this Thanksgiving week, and I am
grateful for this great blessing. I hope that you are gathered with your loved
ones while you rejoice and thank God for your blessings. Happy Thanksgiving to
all of you!
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