I recall something from history class many years ago regarding the thanksgiving tradition ...Abraham Lincoln (?) a national day of prayer and giving thanks to expand upon the tradition of the day...
2007-11-14 01:20:36
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answer #1
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answered by coffee_pot12 7
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I wouldn't call it a Christian holiday at all. So, yes.
"Thanksgiving Day , legal holiday in the U.S., first celebrated in early colonial times in New England. The actual origin, however, is probably the harvest festivals that are traditional in many parts of the world Festivals and Feasts. After the first harvest was completed by the Plymouth colonists in 1621, Governor William Bradford proclaimed a day of thanksgiving and prayer, shared by all the colonists and neighboring Native Americans. The Pilgrims of Plymouth Rock held their Thanksgiving in 1621 as a three day "thank you" celebration to the leaders of the Wampanoag Indian tribe and their families for teaching them the survival skills they needed to make it in the New World. It was their good fortune that the tradition of the Wampanoags was to treat any visitor to their homes with a share of whatever food the family had, even if supplies were low. It was also an amazing stroke of luck that one of the Wampanoag, Tisquantum or Squanto, had become close friends with a British explorer, John Weymouth, and had learned the Pilgrim's language in his travels to England with Weymouth."
2007-11-14 01:13:32
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answer #2
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answered by JF 4
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I've never associated Thanksgiving with Christ. Ever. You can be thankful for your friends and family without being religious. To me (and I'm a Christian!) Thanksgiving is a secular holiday.
2007-11-14 01:13:41
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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Uh yeah they do. Thanksgiving is not just a Christian Holiday... correct me if I'm wrong but weren't the pilgrims Puritan?
"The people who would come to be known as the Pilgrims (known as the Pilgrim Fathers in the UK) were brought together by a common belief in the ideas promoted by Richard Clyfton, parson at All Saints' Parish Church in Babworth, East Retford, Nottinghamshire, between 1586 and 1605. This congregation held Separatist beliefs comparable to nonconforming movements (i.e., groups not in communion with the Church of England) led by Henry Barrowe, John Greenwood and Robert Browne. Unlike conforming Puritan groups who maintained their membership in and allegiance to the Church of England, Separatists held that their differences with the Church of England were irreconcilable and that their worship should be organized independently of the trappings, traditions and organization of a central state church."
2007-11-14 01:19:44
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answer #4
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answered by KaterinaM 2
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Do honestly believe that your self chosen religious course is the only one that leads to enlightenment or that teaches the existence of a proper being or god? Such self righteous delight is conceited and lacking in humility and awareness and yet you profess to be a "Christian"? The oldest prepared faith of mankind is Hinduism, which additionally has the oldest scriptures. In stated scriptures you will locate the toddler Sri Krishna in a good, hiding on the same time as a community ruler seeks his dying and slays the youngsters interior the encompassing section, you will locate miracles of therapeutic the disabled and giving existence to the ineffective, feeding the hungry and coaching all to seek for his or her courting with God as a conventional profession. you will additionally word the similarity between the call Krishna and the identify of Christ. Alexander the great replaced into so inspired by using the Hindu teachings, experts, saints and holy ladies and men, that he had the Vedic scriptures translated into Greek and delivered them lower back there. Such is the place the term "Kristos" originated long until eventually now there ever replaced right into a Yeshua ben Yoseph. it is astounding what number Christians know so little with regard to the historic progression of Judaism and their own sect of the same. by using the way, the word you drained to apply replaced into "atheist", no longer "achiest". subsequently there's a Spell verify, and why there are colleges... namaste
2016-10-16 11:59:33
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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that is a good question. have am a christian who has non-christian friends. they do celebrate thanksgiving. it is not a religious holiday. and just because they are non-christians does not mean that they do not believe in God or that Jesus died to save us. they might just dont know how to make the commitment to live their life for Christ. so go easy on them and keep on praying tat they will make that decision.
2007-11-14 01:15:19
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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Thanksgiving isn't a religious festival so I suppose that a lot of non-Christian americans would celebrate it.
I don't and I don't know of anyone who does apart from americans!
2007-11-14 01:24:12
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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Just a few things that i would like to point out to you real quick....
#1 you can believe in God or be on a spiritual path and not be of the Christian faith
#2 we should all give thanks for what we have...regardless of how much or how little we may have....!
May you be blessed with clarity, truth, and tolerance......
bb
)o( Trinity
2007-11-14 01:13:57
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answer #8
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answered by trinity 5
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It's not a religious holiday.
And you can be thankful for something other than a deity. If someone gives you a birthday present and you say thank you, are you thanking God for making that person give you a present or are you thanking the gifter?
2007-11-14 01:17:27
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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As a christian (catholic) In the UK we don't celebrate thanksgiving, we celebrate the birth of Christ, 25th December.
2007-11-14 01:14:35
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answer #10
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answered by Jackie M 7
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