24 November 2004
Federalist Patriot No. 04-47
Wednesday

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CONTENTS:
THE FOUNDATION
THE GOOD NEWS
ORIGINS OF AMERICAN THANKSGIVING
INSIGHTS ON THANKSGIVING
THE GIPPER
THANKSGIVING 2004
THE PATRIOT PERSPECTIVE


Special Edition: THANKSGIVING 2004

______----********O********----______
THE FOUNDATION

"Go on, then, in your generous enterprise with gratitude to Heaven for
past success, and confidence of it in the future." --Samuel Adams

______----********O********----______
THE GOOD NEWS

"Enter His gates with thanksgiving, and his courts with praise.
Give thanks to him and praise his name.  For the Lord is good and
his love endures forever; His faithfulness continues through all
generations." (Psalm 100:4-5)

______----********O********----______
ORIGINS OF AMERICAN THANKSGIVING

"That all the People may with united Hearts on that Day express a just
Sense of His unmerited Favors -- Particularly in that it hath pleased
Him, by His over ruling Providence to support us in a just and necessary
War for the Defence of our Rights and Liberties; ...by defeating the
Councils and evil Designs of our Enemies, and giving us Victory over
their Troops -- and by the Continuance of that Union among these States,
which by his Blessing, will be their future Strength & Glory." --Samuel
Adams on behalf of the Continental Congress, November 3, 1778

"We have come to this Rock, to record here our homage for our Pilgrim
Fathers; our sympathy in their sufferings; our gratitude for their
labors; our admiration of their virtues; our veneration for their piety;
and our attachment to those principles of civil and religious liberty,
which they encountered the dangers of the ocean, the storms of heaven,
the violence of savages, disease, exile, and famine, to enjoy and
establish.  And we would leave here, also, for the generations which are
rising up rapidly to fill our places, some proof, that we have endeavored
to transmit the great inheritance unimpaired; that in our estimate of
public principles, and private virtue; in our veneration of religion and
piety; in our devotion to civil and religious liberty; in our regard
to whatever advances human knowledge, or improves human happiness,
we are not altogether unworthy of our origin." --Daniel Webster

"Let the American youth never forget, that they possess a noble
inheritance, bought by the toils, and sufferings, and blood of their
ancestors; and capacity, if wisely improved, and faithfully guarded,
of transmitting to their latest posterity all the substantial blessings
of life, the peaceful enjoyment of liberty, property, religion, and
independence." --Justice Joseph Story (Link here for a children's
Thanksgiving quiz: http://FederalistPatriot.US/news/thanks.asp)

______----********O********----______
INSIGHTS ON THANKSGIVING

"O Lord, that lends me life, lend me a heart replete with
thankfulness." --William Shakespeare  ++  "A thankful heart is not only
the greatest virtue, but the parent of all other virtues." --Cicero
++  "The worship most acceptable to God comes from a thankful and
cheerful heart." --Plutarch  ++  "Since the things we do determine the
character of life, no blessed person can become unhappy.  For he will
never do those things which are hateful and petty." --Aristotle  ++
"Pride slays thanksgiving, but an humble mind is the soil out of which
thanks naturally grow.  A proud man is seldom a grateful man, for he
never thinks he gets as much as he deserves." --Henry Ward Beecher  ++
"I awoke this morning with devout thanksgiving for my friends, the
old and new." --Ralph Waldo Emerson  ++  "The person who has stopped
being thankful has fallen asleep in life." --Robert Louis Stevenson ++
"We ought to give thanks for all fortune: if it is 'good,' because it is
good, if 'bad' because it works in us patience, humility and the contempt
of this world and the hope of our eternal country." --C.S. Lewis  ++
"No people on earth have more cause to be thankful than ours, and this
is said reverently, in no spirit of boastfulness in our own strength,
but with the gratitude to the Giver of good who has blessed us. Let us
remember that, as much has been given us, much will be expected from
us, and that true homage comes from the heart as well as from the lips,
and shows itself in deeds." --Theodore Roosevelt  ++  "Stand up, on this
Thanksgiving Day, stand upon your feet. Believe in man. Soberly and with
clear eyes, believe in your own time and place. There is not, and there
never has been a better time, or a better place to live in." --Phillips
Brooks ++  "Even in the midst of the tragedy of a world shaken by war
and immeasurable disaster, in the midst of sorrow and great peril,
because even amidst the darkness that has gathered about us we can see
the great blessings God has bestowed upon us." --Woodrow Wilson ++
"Measured by the standards of men of their time, ... [the Pilgrims]
were the humble of the earth.  Measured by later accomplishments,
they were the mighty. In appearance weak and persecuted they came --
rejected, despised -- an insignificant band; in reality strong and
independent, a mighty host of whom the world was not worthy, destined
to free mankind." --Calvin Coolidge

______----********O********----______
THE GIPPER

"While never willing to bow to a tyrant, our forefathers were always
willing to get to their knees before God.  When catastrophe threatened,
they turned to God for deliverance.  When the harvest was bountiful,
the first thought, was thanksgiving to God.  Prayer is today as
powerful a force in our nation as it has ever been.  We as a nation
should never forget this source of strength. ... Through the storms
of Revolution, Civil War, and the great World Wars, as well as during
times of disillusionment and disarray, the nation has turned to God
in prayer for deliverance.  We thank Him for answering our call, for,
surely, He has.  As a nation, we have been richly blessed with His love
and generosity." --Ronald Reagan

______----********O********----______
THANKSGIVING 2004

"We are a nation founded by men and women who deeply felt their
dependence on God and always gave Him thanks and praise. As we prepare
for Thanksgiving in 2004, we have much to be thankful for: our families,
our friends, our beautiful country, and the freedom granted to each one
of us by the Almighty.  During this holiday season, we think especially
of our men and women of the armed forces, many of whom are spending
Thanksgiving far from home. ...Through their courage and skill and
sacrifice they are keeping our country safe and free. America is proud
of our military. We're proud of our military families. And we give them
our thanks every day of the year." --President George W. Bush

______----********O********----______
THE PATRIOT PERSPECTIVE

THE BLESSINGS OF LIBERTY

Which is the quintessential American holiday? The Fourth of July, our
nation's recognized birthday? No, a typical Independence Day celebration
now turns more toward recreation than to original customs of patriotic
reflection on the debt we owe both to our Founding Fathers and our
Heavenly Father. But Thanksgiving...this holiday, more than any other
commemorated in our country, has retained -- even if in attenuated form
-- the sentiments present from its first celebration on our shores. On
Thanksgiving, we still stop to give thanks for our blessings; we still
take pause to hold our family and friends dearest in our hearts; and
we still acknowledge, expressly or implicitly, the Author of life and
liberty who has heaped bounties on us beyond our deserving.

In peril, privation and war, or in plenty -- during commemorations
that often mingled acknowledgment of both -- we have from the beginning
freely gathered together to send up thanks and praise to God for past
blessings, and to implore His continued favor. Other countries may
have limited observances of thankfulness, but ours is unique among the
world's nations in weaving thanksgiving to God, observed officially at
critical junctures, as a joining thread in our country's life.

Is this a revelation today? Certainly, the elections earlier this month
demonstrated that we Americans are split rather than joined over this
issue -- between those who agree with our Founders that we in the United
States are a free nation under God, and those imbued in a relentlessly
materialistic worldview that appeals mainly to government edicts as
solutions. Post-election vitriol has descended into anti-Christian
bigotry -- masquerading as enlightenment -- which assuredly yields
far less tolerance and freedom than systems rooted in Christian
principles. Indeed, we contend that the spirit of true gratefulness
stands directly opposed to the mentality of aggrieved entitlement,
accounting for much of the dissension in politics these days. In this
respect, "I deserve it!" cannot possibly be any further from "Thank you,
Lord." Moreover, we contend that thanksgiving is essential to continuing
liberty in our blessed land.

Our nation's success in the world is not haphazard, not happenstance,
and not merely the result of our own efforts. No, God has shepherded
us from the first days colonists walked this new land -- and we put
our country at risk whenever we forget this truth -- that we owe our
Lord thanks and obedience. Our forebears knew that God judges nations
and communities as well as individuals. They knew, too, that we are
responsible for our own attitudes of thanksgiving and also for gathering
together to offer prayers of gratitude.

The celebration we hark back to as the "First Thanksgiving" was the
Pilgrims' three-day feast in early November of 1621. The Pilgrims were
Puritans, Calvinist Protestants who rejected the institutional Church
of England, embarking from Plymouth, England, on September 6, 1620,
sailing for a new world that offered the promise of both civil and
religious liberty. For almost three months, 102 seafarers braved harsh
elements to arrive off the coast of what is now Massachusetts, in late
November of 1620. On December 11, before disembarking at Plymouth Rock,
the voyagers signed the "Mayflower Compact," often cited as America's
original document of civil government and the first to introduce
self-government. While still anchored at Provincetown harbor, their
pastor, John Robinson, counseled, "You are become a body politic...and
are to have only them for your...governors which yourselves shall make
choice of." Governor William Bradford described the Mayflower Compact as
"a combination made by them before they came ashore...occasioned partly
by the discontented and mutinous speeches that some of the strangers
amongst them had let fall.... That when they came a shore they would
use their owne libertie; for none had power to command them...."

Upon landing in America, the Pilgrims conducted a prayer service, then
quickly turned to building shelters. Starvation and sickness during
the ensuing New England winter killed almost half their population,
but through prayer and hard work, with the assistance of their
Indian friends, the Pilgrims reaped a rich harvest in the summer of
1621. The settlers knew clearly that their new-world enterprise sought
civil and religious liberties, but, disastrously, under pressure from
investors funding their colony, they reluctantly organized their efforts
communally, holding all fruit of their labors in common. Predictably,
their work yielded little success, and Plymouth Colony was in danger
of foundering after two years. Bradford recorded in his history of
the colony, when Plymouth's leaders regained their right senses: "At
length, after much debate of things, the Governor (with the advice of
the chiefest amongst them) gave way that they should set corn every man
for his own particular, and in that regard trust to themselves; in all
other things to go in the general way as before. And so assigned to every
family a parcel of land, according to the proportion of their number."

Thus, the first Thanksgiving to God in the Calvinist tradition in
Plymouth Colony was celebrated during the summer of 1623, when the
colonists declared a Thanksgiving holiday after their crops were
saved by much-needed rainfall. And the reorganization of their labors
toward ownership and property rights set them on the proper path to
reaping continual rewards. Families working together primarily for
their own betterment were freer -- and were better able to pay off
the investors. (Conventional commentary fractures property rights from
civil and religious liberty; the canard is to thoughtlessly murmur of a
political position termed "fiscally conservative" but "socially liberal"
-- a distinction our forebears would find strange, indeed. As the
Plymouth Pilgrims' experience demonstrated, liberty and virtue infusing
governing arrangements are the sole sure guarantors of private property.)

By the mid-17th century, the custom of autumnal Thanksgivings was
established throughout New England. Observance of Thanksgiving
Festivals spread to other colonies during the American Revolution,
and the Continental Congresses, cognizant of the need for a warring
country's continuing grateful entreaties to God, proclaimed yearly
Thanksgiving days during the Revolutionary War, from 1777 to 1783.

To those who insist nowadays that religious observances are improper
in government acts, despite their centrality during Revolutionary
days, in one of the first acts of the new constitutional government,
our Founding Fathers officially recognized the importance (and
rectitude) of a day for citizens to come together giving God thanks
for our nation's blessings. After adopting the Constitution's Bill
of Rights, Congress approved a motion for proclamation of a national
day of thanksgiving. Both chambers of Congress asked President George
Washington "to recommend to the people of the United States a day of
public thanksgiving and prayer, to be observed by acknowledging with
grateful hearts the many and signal favors of Almighty God, especially
by affording them an opportunity peaceably to establish a form of
government for their safety and happiness."

Washington set his signature to the first day of thanks for the liberties
enshrined in our new Constitution, writing:

"Whereas 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....

"Now, therefore, I do recommend and assign Thursday, the 26th day
of November next, to be devoted by the people of these States to the
service of that great and glorious Being who is the Beneficent Author
of all the good that was, that is, or that will be; that we may then
all unite in rendering unto Him our sincere and humble thanks for His
kind care and protection of the people of this country previous to
their becoming a nation; for the signal and manifold mercies and the
favorable interpositions of His providence in the course and conclusion
of the late war; for the great degree of tranquillity, union, and plenty
which we have since enjoyed; for the peaceable and rational manner in
which we have been enabled to establish constitutions of government
for our safety and happiness, and particularly the national one now
lately instituted; for the civil and religious liberty with which we
are blessed, and the means we have of acquiring and diffusing useful
knowledge; and, in general, for all the great and various favors which
He has been pleased to confer upon us.

"And also that we may then unite in most humbly offering our prayers and
supplication to the great Lord and Ruler of Nations, and beseech Him to
pardon our national and other transgressions; to enable us all, whether
in public or private stations, to perform our several and relative duties
properly and punctually; to render our national government a blessing
to all the people by constantly being a government of wise, just and
constitutional laws, discreetly and faithfully executed and obeyed; to
protect and guide all sovereigns and nations (especially such as have
shown kindness to us), and to bless them with good governments, peace,
and concord; to promote the knowledge and practice of true religion and
virtue, and the increase of science among them and us; and, generally,
to grant unto all mankind such a degree of temporal prosperity as He
alone knows to be best.

"Given under my hand, at the city of New York, the 3d day of October,
AD 1789."

As president, John Adams followed the custom of declaring national days
of thanks, and James Madison called for three national observances
of fasting and grateful prayer for deliverance during the War of
1812. Thomas Jefferson and John Quincy Adams refused to continue the
practice of proclaiming a day of national thanksgiving, in a foretaste
of the taint of impermissibility current-day "progressives" attach to
acknowledgment of God as Provider of our country's blessings.

After 1815, there were no more annual Thanksgiving proclamations until
our citizens were imperiled by the War Between the States, when Abraham
Lincoln declared November 26, 1863, a Day of Thanksgiving, calling for
prayer and thanksgiving for the nation, saying in part, "...[It is]
announced in the Holy Scriptures and proven by all history, that those
nations are blessed whose God is the Lord.... It has seemed to me fit
and proper that...[God's blessings] should be solemnly, reverently,
and gratefully acknowledged, as with one heart and one voice, by the
whole American people."

For the following 75 years, every subsequent president repeated that
proclamation until 1939, when Franklin D. Roosevelt moved Thanksgiving
Day to a week earlier than had been tradition, to lengthen the growing
pre-Christmas consumer frenzy. Two years later, Congress returned the
celebration to its traditional date, in 1941 permanently setting the
fourth Thursday of each November as our official national Thanksgiving.

So stand our nation's Thanksgiving Day observances -- honored annually,
almost perfunctorily, and not directly responding to particular events
endangering our country. We have much to be thankful for as a nation
this Thanksgiving, 2004. Unlike the Puritan colonists of Plymouth
and the Revolutionary colonials, we are rarely poised on the perilous
edge of hunger and death. Marking more than three years since the 9/11
attacks, we have experienced minimal follow-on assaults from the Jihadi
enemies bent on our destruction. And our fellow countrymen, U.S. troops,
remaining in harm's way abroad the better to protect us, are atop the
list for our heartfelt gratitude.

Nonetheless, these times are treacherous. Such too were the times in
which we initiated our common thanksgiving commemorations. However,
our ancestors appreciated that liberty and thanksgiving are of a
piece. Ironically, on the south bank of Washington's Tidal Basin,
etched in the marble of the Jefferson Memorial, is Jefferson the
religious resister's immutable admonition about the origin of liberty --
"God who gave us life gave us liberty. Can the liberties of a nation be
secure when we have removed a conviction that these liberties are the
gift of God?" We must offer God thanks for our liberties, which are the
chiefest of our blessings. But we must also be free to be fully thankful,
as a nation.

PUBLISHER'S NOTE: Regarding our Thanksgiving edition (as with our Easter
and Christmas editions), we take leave from the rigors of research
and analysis of contemporaneous news, policy and opinion in order to
focus on an eternal message, indeed a Christian message. To our Patriot
readers of faiths other than Christianity, we hope that this edition
serves to deepen your understanding of our faith -- the faith of our
Founders. Permission granted to reprint or forward this edition of The
Federalist Patriot.

As you know, every edition we publish ends with this solemn request:
"Please pray on this day, and every day, for our Patriot Armed Forces
standing in harm's way around the world in defense of our liberty,
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Patriot, Captain Sean Patrick Sims, commanding officer of A Company,
2-2 BN, 1st Infantry Division, from his father, Colonel Tom Sims
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On behalf of our National Advisory Board and your Patriot staff, we
wish God's blessing and peace upon you and your families. Semper Vigilo,
Paratus, et Fidelis!

Mark Alexander


Lex et Libertas -- Semper Vigilo, Paratus, et Fidelis!  Mark Alexander,
Publisher, for the editors and staff.  (Please pray on this day, and
every day, for our Patriot Armed Forces standing in harm's way around
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