As Americans prepare to celebrate Thanksgiving tomorrow, it is good to remember the reason why we celebrate this day: Gratitude. The Pilgrims were grateful for surviving their first winter in America. They were grateful for the coming of spring. They were grateful for the assistance of the Native Americans in growing crops in the new land.
Every
year, Rush Limbaugh would dedicate his last broadcast before the Thanksgiving
break to telling the real story of the Pilgrims’ trip to America and their life
in the new world. Here is Rush’s retelling of the story on his last
Thanksgiving show.
According to Derrick Morgan at The Heritage Foundation, Americans celebrated Thanksgiving prior to the Revolutionary War, but it did not become an official national celebration until President George Washington sent out his 1789 proclamation. He encouraged all Americans to set aside November 26 to render “sincere and humble thanks” to God “for his kind care and protection of the People of this Country.”
Morgan wrote that subsequent Presidents did not follow
Washington’s example, and Thanksgiving was nearly forgotten until President Abraham
Lincoln revived the tradition of celebrating gratitude in 1862. He set apart
the fourth Thursday in November as Thanksgiving Day from that time forward.
President
Franklin Delano Roosevelt tried to change the day for commercial reasons, but
Congress stopped him and passed a federal law setting the fourth Thursday in
November apart as Thanksgiving Day in 1941.
Thanksgiving
is a federal holiday, meaning that children are out of school and many offices
and other businesses are closed to enable families to be together. Family unity
is worth our gratitude, but Morgan (and other people) report that showing
gratitude is good for us in many ways.
… Researchers at the John Templeton
Foundation have uncovered that “in general, more grateful people are happier,
more satisfied with their lives, less materialistic, and less likely to suffer
from burnout.” Other studies show that more grateful heart patients report
better sleep, less fatigue and less inflammation.
Grateful people were not only happier and
healthier themselves, they also positively influenced others through higher
levels of generosity, kindness, and helpfulness. Giving thanks improves relationships
and can even make our homes, our workplaces, and perhaps even our country better
places to live.
Giving thanks is easier said than done,
however, especially in a world where “anger has come to characterize our
polarized political environment,” as scholar Patrick Garry has noted. But
despite all that there is to be angry about – from crime and inflation to war
and wokeness – conservatives especially can’t give up on Thanksgiving.
Gratitude is the heart of conservatism,
and in the long run, it may even prove to be the virtue that “helps sand off
the edges of anger toward those we disagree with” and unite us [as] a country
again, as conservative writer Pete Wehner has suggested.
This Thanksgiving, then, how can you best
use your holiday? For starters, you might consider avoiding politics
altogether. Politics, which increasingly resembles a contact sport, rarely
brings families together and it is hopefully not the most important thing in
your life.
But what is? This Thanksgiving, perhaps,
consider reflecting on the four basic things that the wisdom of the Scriptures,
Aristotle, and modern social science all indicate lead to human happiness:
family, friends, work, and religion.
Why not focus conversations on these
topics, deeply connecting with friends and family? One tried and true way to do
that is to count your blessings, literally. It is nearly impossible to make a
list of all the things you are thankful for, but it is a great exercise and you’ll
end up feeling much better than you did before. Although you certainly can do
this individually, you might also suggest that everyone around the Thanksgiving
table voice what they’re grateful for.
Morgan’s article reminded me of a hymn that I have sung since I was a little girl. The title of the hymn is “Count Your Blessings.” The text was written by Johnson Oatman Jr. (1856-1922), and the music was written by Edwin O. Excell (1851-1921). The words are as follows.
1. When upon life’s
billows you are tempest-tossed,
When
you are discouraged, thinking all is lost,
Count
your many blessings; name them one by one,
And
it will surprise you what the Lord has done.
2. Are you ever
burdened with a load of care?
Does
the cross seem heavy you are called to bear?
Count
your many blessings; ev’ry doubt will fly,
And
you will be singing as the days go by.
3. When you look at
others with their lands and gold,
Think
that Christ has promised you his wealth untold.
Count
your many blessings; money cannot buy
Your
reward in heaven nor your home on high.
4. So amid the
conflict, whether great or small,
Do
not be discouraged; God is over all.
Count
your many blessings; angels will attend,
Help
and comfort give you to your journey’s end.
Chorus
Count
your blessings;
Name
them one by one.
Count
your blessings;
See
what God hath done.
Count
your blessings;
Name
them one by one.
Count
your many blessings;
See
what God hath done.
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