‘O’ give thanks unto God of heaven: for his mercy endureth forever.
(Psalm 136:26)
Over three and a half centuries, or three hundred and ninety-nine years ago, a little band of men and women joined their hands and hearts in America’s first Thanksgiving. With Indian guests, they gathered around a table for the New World’s first Thanksgiving dinner. Measured by our standards, they did not have much. The harvest was in, and they were grateful to God. But their needs were great, and there were no supermarkets down the street. Cold, hunger, and sickness threatened their very lives.
How far, in some ways, have we come since that first day of thanks in 1621? Today, more than two hundred million people populate our land. We produce more food, more fuel, and more finished products than any nation in the world. Measured by dollars and cents, our gross national product exceeds one trillion dollars and is climbing every year. Science and industry do our bidding. We can even send a man to the moon.
But like the Pilgrims, we have great needs. The richest nation in the world is perplexed and troubled by crucial shortages. Millions are Homeless; forty-five million people go to bed hungry every night. We have higher wages and more dollars, but unemployment lines are long, and the dollar buys less and less all the time. More- over, we as a nation are over 4.0 trillion dollars in debt.
Thank you for reading an excerpt of Rev. Rocky Brown’s article on scoopusamedia.com. To read more of the article, “Why We Should Give God Thanks,” please subscribe to Scoop USA Media. Print subscriptions are $75.00 and online subscriptions (Print, Digital and Vizion) are $90. (52 weeks/1 year)