Showing posts with label Thanksgiving. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Thanksgiving. Show all posts

Thursday, November 25, 2010

Happy Thanksgiving Day!

Happy Thanksgiving!



Russell and I enjoyed a quiet morning together. You probably recognize "The Boss" cup. I love the little honey bears; they remind me of Papa. I have recently come to enjoy a hot cup of coffee on occasion. *1/4 teaspoon NesCafe instant coffee, 1/4 teaspoon fructose, and maybe 2 Tablespoons of heavy cream. Hmm. Delicious!*



After breakfast we carried on a tradition I started just a few years before I left home. Using the alphabet, we made a list of the things we are thankful for. A few of the things I am truly grateful for are Airplanes, Email, and Skype so I can keep in touch with my family. As we enter this holiday season I miss them more and more. Sometimes it seems like so long ago since I was with them that it's almost like it was another girl another lifetime ago.



As I was cooking I noticed this little intruding, wanna-be Thanksgiving guest. He has been living in Russell's office for about a week now. I've made several attempts to return him to the great outdoors and, surprisingly, I actually succeeded today. I turned around several minutes later and found him making his way back into my house! I guess he smelled the food and wanted in on it. =D



Russell's parents are in Ohio with Bro. Buddy's family. They had planned on taking Russell's brothers and Rob with them, but the boys all recently obtained jobs and couldn't go along. Big Daddy, Russell's grandpa, was going to take Russell's Aunt Tricia + her kids, his brothers, and us out to Golden Corral for Thanksgiving dinner to make things easy, since all the extended family had other plans this year. Eating out at a restaurant on Thanksgiving day isn't my idea of cozy, so I volunteered to do a majority of the cooking so Grandma wouldn't have to. I was very excited when the plans worked out that way. I love cooking! (Just not cleaning up behind myself. =) So, we had a small get-together on the property with some of Russell's family and a family from church.



Okay, it's a blurry picture, but my hubby still looks cute! This is our first Thanksgiving being married. I wanted it to be special, and it was. I think every couple wants to start new traditions of their own when first embarking on a life's journey together...and we did.



With all the food I made and the additional dishes Aunt Tricia, Grandma, and Mrs. Cherene brought, we had more than enough food. Clay's turkey was excellent--moist and tasty!



The food was yummy and the fellowship was...uh, enlightening, considering I sat with Russell at the table with all the single guys, if that says anything. In many ways I live in a man's world. It's interesting being the only girl in the family, especially with my mother-in-law gone. I get to play "mommy" with Aaron and make sure he eats his veggies. =D



Creamed onion casserole must be a Yankee thing or something. Nobody knew what it was but they liked it well enough. I tried a new recipe and will definitely make it again.



I love butternut squash! We can't get it in Holland, so I had fun experimenting with it this Thanksgiving. Silky Squash--It turned out really good.

I got to spend several hours of the afternoon talking with my family!
God is good!


Saturday, November 29, 2008

Thanksgiving 2008

We had a very nice Thanksgiving. I hope you all did too! Thought you might enjoy some pictures of our day…

This is the tent Mom made for the kids. The girls and I colored some Thanksgiving pictures sitting under it. Goodness, I remember the thrill of a tent when I was little. It was just about the greatest thing in the world. It’s too bad we all have to grow up and lose interest in tents; I can tell this is the last Thanksgiving we’ll be needing one.













Little boys and their toys! The men/boys immediately plunged into a phone/computer/camera conversation upon walking in the door. Except for going street preaching after dinner, this is pretty much where they were the rest of the evening. (chuckle) What would we do without our men? They make us laugh with their teasing, they out-talk us any day of the week (we just laugh about those “women talk more than men” jokes, because we know who is really guilty! Ha!), and they help us with all their wonderful knowledge of electronic gizmos and gadgets. I think we’ll keep them! =)




















My two little friends! Aren’t they cute? I love them dearly. We have a lot of fun together. Look at those big blue eyes! =)















Our Thanksgiving dinner! Turkey, mashed potatoes, Southern cornbread stuffing, Brussels sprouts, squash, creamed onions, and cranberry sauce. Yummy!

The Kamps and Huussen kids eating their dinner in the kitchen!








And the adults in the living room eating their meal.


After dinner we got on Skype and sang ‘Happy Birthday’ to Clay, who turned 18, and we talked with the boys for a little bit. The men/boys left to go street preaching downtown, which they hadn’t actually planned on doing. Meanwhile, Mom suggested we take out the craft stuff we had planned to do with the girls. Alisah, Grace, and Annika decorated little gingerbread dolls. I had fun helping Annika. She told me how she wanted everything arranged on her little gingerbread doll, and then I helped her. The girls had a lot of fun and proudly showed their creations to their mom. They did a good job!
























We played several games of Pit while the Kamps were here, and they enjoyed the game immensely. That is definitely one of my favorite games!!!













The guys got home promptly at 8:15 p.m., and we ate pumpkin pie. Yummy! It is certainly a treat, because for years we couldn’t buy pumpkin here in Holland. We recently found a store that sells American goodies, but they cost an arm and a leg because they are imported. When the Maynards came to visit us they brought several cans of pumpkin, so now we have enough for several Thanksgivings! =) I made a loaf of banana bread for the girls, because I know they don’t enjoy the pie as much as the rest of us do. Grace turned around in her seat to face me and said, “Hannah, the banana bread’s good. Very!” That made me feel glad! It is a pleasure to please others!!!

Dad read a Thanksgiving story called “The Thankful Book.” What a sweet story! It was very nice! I love it when Dad reads.












The last event of the evening was Pin-the-Tail-on-the-Turkey, which turned out to be a slightly more aggressive game of Kill-the-Turkey, instead. =D The guys loved it, of course. It was fun. The goal was to pin the axe on the turkey’s “Adam’s apple.” (See the sticker?) It was a tie between Alisah and Josiah, so we had them try again, and Alisah won. Good for her!

After the Kamps went home, we got to talk with the Maynards for a while, and then we went to bed. All in all, it was a very enjoyable day! We thank God for His many blessings!!!

Wednesday, November 26, 2008

Preparing Heart and Home for Thanksgiving

I'm looking forward to Thanksgiving this year! The pilgrims invited their Indian friends to their Thanksgiving feast, and we will be having our dear Canadian friends join us for the special day. We have always celebrated Thanksgiving with the Kamps. It's a blessing to have good friends who are living close by during these holidays when we can't be with family.

This year we're planning fun games like pin-the-tail-on-the-turkey and possibly some surprises--like an Indian tent. In 2006 we were in the States for Thanksgiving, but in 2005 Mom made a big tent in the living room out of curtains she had stored away. Each of the kids were given a paper feathered headpiece to wear, and they ate their dinner under the tent. Afterwards we colored pictures and played games and just had a lot of fun together.

We already have much of the food--the stuffing, creamed onions, squash, and turkey--prepared and in the freezer. The mashed potatoes, Brussels sprouts, and pumpkin pie still have to be made. I'm looking forward to the sweet and spicy aroma of pumpkin pie wafting from the kitchen! Yummy!

I just love Thanksgiving Day! I enjoy all the delicious food and the warm fellowship of loved ones. We have so much to be thankful for, yet, often in the busyness of the day we forget the very reason for this day set apart for celebration. It is for giving thanks. Thanks to God! Someone pointed out, “The Pilgrims made seven times more graves than huts. No Americans have been more impoverished than these who, nevertheless, set aside a day of thanksgiving.”

Last Thanksgiving was very special to me; we did something we have never done before. I got the idea to make a sheet of paper listing the letters of the alphabet followed by blank lines. Our family gathered around the living room on Thanksgiving Day, and together we remembered all the blessings God has showered upon our family. Matching the things we were thankful for with their beginning letter on the sheet, we soon had the list filled out and running over onto the back of the paper. I was so glad that I could sit with my family and discuss the good things the Lord has done. Looking back, it was surely the best part of the day! Then, after we had talked for nearly 2 hours, we knelt down in prayer and Dad thanked the One who had graciously given us so many reasons to be thankful. (Dad ended up preaching a whole sermon from our 'Thanksgiving Sheet' the next Sunday! He had only planned to point out a few things on the list, but by the time he finally got to his message, more than an hour had passed! Needless to say, it was a fun service. The following Sunday Mom received yellow roses from somebody in our church because she had listed them as one of the things she was thankful for.) God is good to us, but very often we ignorantly fail to observe our blessings simply because life is too busy. Too busy to pause and ponder. Too busy to stop and consider how truly blessed we are. Sometimes we just need to make time to be thankful!

This year we plan to do the same thing as last year. I've made a PDF copy of our Thanksgiving sheet, and I would like to encourage you join us in our new Thanksgiving Day tradition. Print it off and fill it out. Remember the good things God has done for you! Put your heart and mind into it, and by the time you are finished, the spirit of Thanksgiving will have filled your soul. You may be surprised to find that the food is tastier, the fellowship is sweeter, and the fun is more exciting than you remembered it being in years past. You may be surprised to find it has been the best Thanksgiving you ever had! Why? Because you took time to thank the One who made it all possible.

Click here for ‘Thanksgiving Sheet’ PDF!

Have a Happy Thanksgiving!

Make a joyful noise unto the LORD, all ye lands. Serve the LORD with gladness: come before his presence with singing. Know ye that the LORD he is God: it is he that hath made us, and not we ourselves; we are his people, and the sheep of his pasture. Enter into his gates with thanksgiving, and into his courts with praise: be thankful unto him, and bless his name. For the LORD is good; his mercy is everlasting; and his truth endureth to all generations.
Psalm 100

The Origins of Thanksgiving

Article by the Christian Law Association

Americans are beginning to forget the important origins of our national Thanksgiving holiday. Its spiritual significance is no longer taught in our nation’s public schools. In fact, most school children today are taught that Thanksgiving originated when the Pilgrims invited their Indian friends to dinner to thank them for providing sustenance after the Mayflower landed. As with much of modern American revisionist history, there really is much more to the story.

Coming to America
The Atlantic crossing in the fall of 1620 had been an extremely difficult journey for the Pilgrims. For two months, 102 people were wedged into what was called the “tween decks” of the Mayflower—the ship’s cargo space with only about five-and-a-half feet of headroom. No one was allowed above deck because of the terrible storms. This was no pleasure trip.

The Pilgrims comforted themselves on their journey by singing from the Book of Psalms. This “noise” irritated one of the ship’s paid crewmembers. He told the Pilgrims he was looking forward to throwing their corpses overboard after they succumbed to the routine illnesses common on such voyages. As it turned out, this crewmember himself was the only person to die on the voyage and be thrown overboard. God providentially protected His own people. A little-known fact about the Mayflower is that this ship normally carried a cargo of wine; and the wine spillage from previous voyages had soaked the beams, acting as a disinfectant to prevent the spread of disease.

During one terrible storm, the main beam of the mast cracked. Death was certain if this beam could not be repaired. At that moment, the whole Pilgrim adventure could very easily have ended on the bottom of the Atlantic Ocean. Providentially, the Pilgrims had with them a large iron printing press screw. That screw repaired the beam, saving the ship and all on board.

“Land Ho!”
After sixty-six days at sea, land was sighted off Cape Cod, Massachusetts, not the place these Pilgrims wanted to be. They intended to establish their new colony in the northern parts of Virginia (which then extended to the Hudson River in modern-day New York), but two factors interrupted their plans. The winds had blown them off course, yes; but they later learned that other Englishmen who wanted to settle in the same part of Virginia had actually bribed the ship’s crew to land them farther north.

Despite this chicanery, God was in charge and the Pilgrims landed exactly where God wanted them to be. Had they actually made landfall near the Hudson River, they most certainly would have been immediately attacked by hostile Indians. Instead, they arrived at the one spot along the coast where hostile Indians had been providentially removed from the land.

Many years before the Mayflower journey, local Indians had captured a Frenchman on a fishing expedition to that region. Just as they were about to kill him, the Frenchman warned them God would be angry, would destroy them all, and would replace them with another nation. The Indians boastfully replied that his God could never kill them. Yet, a year or two before the Pilgrims arrived in this very same region, nearly all the native inhabitants had been wiped out by a plague.

Help Arrives
Despite this miraculous provision of safety from hostile Indians, the Pilgrims barely survived their first winter on the Cape. Only four families remained intact; but God was still faithful. In the spring of 1621, He sent Squanto, an English-speaking Indian who offered to teach the Pilgrims how to survive in this strange new land.

Squanto was one of only a few local Indians who escaped the plague. He had been captured as a young man and taken to England as a slave. During that time he mastered the English language. When he was freed, he returned to his native territory on the Cape shortly before the Pilgrims arrived. Probably the most important thing Squanto taught the Pilgrims was how to plant the native winter staple crop--corn.

The Pilgrims thanked God for this wonderful helper. They also repaid Squanto by sharing with him the most valuable treasure they had brought with them from England—the Gospel. Squanto died a year or two after coming to the aid of the Pilgrims, but before his death he asked them to pray with him that he might go to be with their God in Heaven.

Peace and Thankfulness
Squanto introduced other Indians to the Pilgrims, and these Indians were also impressed with the Pilgrims’ God. During the summer of 1621, it appeared the year’s corn harvest would not survive a severe drought. The Pilgrims responded by calling for a day of fasting and prayer. By the end of the day, it was raining. The rain saved the corn, which miraculously sprang back to life. One of the Indians who observed this miracle remarked that the Pilgrims’ God must be a very great God because when the Indians pow-wowed for rain, it always rained so hard that the corn stalks were broken down. They noticed the Pilgrims’ God acted differently by sending a very gentle rain that did not damage the corn harvest.

It was that miraculous corn harvest in 1621 that provided grain for the Pilgrims’ first Thanksgiving meal with their Indian friends and helpers. The evidence of history shows that on this first Thanksgiving Day, both the Pilgrims and Indians thanked God for His great provision and for His goodness toward them all.

Unlike other Europeans who came to America, these Bible-believing Pilgrims were model Christians in their dealings with the native populations. During their first year on the Cape, Squanto, acting as a friend and interpreter, had assisted the Pilgrims in negotiating an important peace treaty with Chief Massasoit, leader of the nearby Wampanoag Indians. The two populations, Indian and Pilgrim, kept that treaty of peace for more than fifty years.

The Tradition Continues
The story of Thanksgiving doesn’t end there. The holiday itself was not officially celebrated until almost 170 years later, after the Revolutionary War had been won and our American Constitution had been adopted. In 1789, Congress approved the Bill of Rights, the first ten amendments to the Constitution. Congress then “recommended a day of public thanksgiving and prayer” to thank God for blessing America. President Washington declared November 26, 1789, as the first national day of prayer and thanksgiving to the Lord.

Another 75 years later, after the Civil War ended, President Abraham Lincoln officially established the last Thursday in November as a day to acknowledge “the gracious gifts of the Most High God,” which He had bestowed on America. Every president continued this tradition until 1941 when Congress officially made Thanksgiving a national holiday.

Teach Your Children
Now that you know the true story of Thanksgiving, this year make sure your children and grandchildren learn it too. As America is currently facing serious challenges both at home and abroad, let’s join together with countless generations before us in giving thanks to God for blessing and preserving our nation. Let’s make sure that all our children and grandchildren learn Whose hand of protection has been on America; and let’s all pray that He will continue to bless and sustain our nation as we continue to acknowledge and honor Him.

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

Thanksgiving Cartoons

Howdy, friends! I found some funny cartoons yesterday and thought I’d share a laugh with you all. These are too funny!





















For those of us who fly frequently, this is a little too familiar. Ha!


























“Here’s the burnt offering…I mean, the turkey!”



This cartoon isn’t supposed to be funny. It’s supposed to make us think. The few times that we were privileged to spend Thanksgiving Day in the States with our family, I remember the sour pusses and miserable attitudes of ungrateful family members who didn’t want to be there. It’s such a terrible thing to have to sit down to a table about to collapse under the weight of all the delicious food. Heaven forbid, we might have to paste a smile on our face and converse with aunts and uncles or play games with the cousins. To be blunt, I find it disgusting and wicked! It makes me mad, because I would love to HAVE to spend Thanksgiving Day in the States every year, but the duties of the mission field call us away from special family gatherings around the holidays.
On this Thanksgiving Day of 2008, let’s remember those who can’t be home with their loved ones for Thanksgiving--our brave men and women fighting to keep foreigners free and possibly facing death on a holiday, or those laying in hospital beds who would give anything in the world to sit down in a comfy, cozy living room surrounded by loving family members. Thanksgiving is supposed to be a day for just that--giving thanks! When you stop and think about it, we really have a lot to be thankful for!!!