The Blessing of Thanksgiving
Let’s start with a little history lesson: “What was going on in the United States when President Lincoln proclaimed a national day of thanksgiving?”
This was the question on one of our recent prayer calls. Someone guessed “the end of the civil war?” Close, but not quite. Lincoln’s proclamation was in 1863, smack in the middle of the civil war.
Why then was he asking the nation to give thanks in the midst of what he described as “a civil war of unequaled magnitude and severity?”
President Lincoln identified several blessings from God, such as:
- No interference of foreign armies in the civil war
- Law and order maintained except in the battlefield
- Agricultural productivity
- Economic prosperity despite diversion of significant resources to the war
- Fertility which resulted in increased population despite many lives lost at war
Where others may have stood overwhelmed with the loss and violence, he was able to identify the providence of God and give thanks.
His attitude is similar to Jesus’ in face of the multitude with only 5 loaves and 2 fish. Andrew saw those loaves and asked “but how far will they go among so many?’ John 6:10 NIV
Jesus took those same loaves, “gave thanks, and distributed them to the people.” John 6:11 NIV
In reporting this story, the other gospels in different translations either say Jesus “gave thanks” or he “blessed” the loaves, using a Greek word that means he “spoke well” of the loaves. In the giving of thanks, the speaking well about what, from a human perspective, was a dire situation, Jesus released a blessing that led to multiplication.
What would it look like for us to give thanks / speak well of / bless all the circumstances of our lives, even those that look contrary? This is particularly important in this year that for many of us has had a lot of loss, uncertainty, and many other challenges. Let us, by the grace of God, like Lincoln, carefully consider all that’s going on, and see the Lord’s ever-present care for us, and give thanks.










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