A rustic Thanksgiving scene showing autumn leaves, pumpkins, candles, and a Pilgrim hat beside an open book, symbolizing the early history of Thanksgiving and a spirit of gratitude.

A Thanksgiving Rooted in Gratitude: From Pilgrims to a National Day of Thanks

Thanksgiving is more than a table filled with comfort food or the start of the holiday season. It is a moment woven into the very beginnings of our nation. Long before it became a national holiday, Thanksgiving was an act of survival, humility, and deep gratitude.

The Pilgrims: A Feast of Faith, Hardship & Hope

In 1621, after a grueling first winter in the New World, the Pilgrims gathered with the Wampanoag people to share a meal of gratitude. Their year had been marked by unimaginable difficulty such as sickness, loss, and the challenges of building a new life in an unfamiliar land.

Yet even in the midst of hardship, the Pilgrims paused to give thanks.

They celebrated God’s provision, the generosity of the Native people who taught them how to plant and survive, and the simple miracle of making it through a year that many did not. Their feast was an act of faith, an act of declaration that, even in suffering, God was present, guiding, sustaining, and giving hope.

It wasn’t abundance that moved them to celebrate.
It was gratitude in the middle of uncertainty.

How Thanksgiving Became a National Holiday

The Thanksgiving we know today grew from this early pattern of pausing to give thanks.

Throughout the 1700s and early 1800s, communities and states held their own days of thanksgiving during times of blessing or deliverance. But it wasn’t until the Civil War in a time of deep national division that President Abraham Lincoln proclaimed a National Day of Thanksgiving in 1863.

In his proclamation, Lincoln invited the nation to turn its heart toward gratitude, even while surrounded by loss and conflict. He recognized that thanksgiving is not based on perfect conditions, but on acknowledging God’s faithfulness in all seasons.

From that moment on, Thanksgiving became an annual reminder that:

  • Gratitude unites people
  • Blessings deserve recognition
  • God’s providence is always at work

Why We Still Celebrate Today

In our modern world, we may not be settling new lands or living through civil war, but we all face challenges, uncertainties, and moments of unexpected grace.

Thanksgiving invites us to pause, just like the Pilgrims, just like those who came before us, reflect on God’s goodness:

  • The people who support us
  • The lessons learned through trials
  • The blessings that quietly sustain us every day
  • The hope that guides us forward

It’s a day to gather, to give thanks, to remember where we’ve been, and to celebrate the God who walks with us still.

May your Thanksgiving be filled with grace, joy, peace, and a renewed awareness of the blessings that surround you!


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Comments

2 responses to “A Thanksgiving Rooted in Gratitude: From Pilgrims to a National Day of Thanks”

  1. I hope you and your loved ones had a great Thanksgiving!

    1. You too, Rojie. Hopefully it was awesome.

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