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Author Topic: Thanksgiving - Protestant Day  (Read 559 times)

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Offline mobius

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Thanksgiving - Protestant Day
« on: November 28, 2013, 10:23:27 AM »
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  • I can't call it a Holiday (Holyday) because it is not! The heretics came here and now look - an Heretical...wait...infidel America.

    In addition, we always here I love Thanksgiving because it is not about the presents and etc. Funny, tomorrow another Blasphemy (Black Friday).

    What about Christ?



    Offline poche

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    Thanksgiving - Protestant Day
    « Reply #1 on: November 29, 2013, 12:19:42 AM »
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  • Quote from: mobius
    I can't call it a Holiday (Holyday) because it is not! The heretics came here and now look - an Heretical...wait...infidel America.

    In addition, we always here I love Thanksgiving because it is not about the presents and etc. Funny, tomorrow another Blasphemy (Black Friday).

    What about Christ?


    Who do you think we are thanking?


    Offline ClarkSmith

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    Thanksgiving - Protestant Day
    « Reply #2 on: November 29, 2013, 04:53:35 PM »
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  • I agree. But 4th of July is even worse because it is all about  worshiping their founding father deitys

    Offline poche

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    Thanksgiving - Protestant Day
    « Reply #3 on: December 01, 2013, 04:52:29 AM »
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  • 1.The first American Thanksgiving was actually celebrated on September 8 (feast of the birth of the Blessed Virgin) in 1565 in St. Augustine, Florida. The Native Americans and Spanish settlers held a feast and the Holy Mass was offered. This was 56 years before the Puritan pilgrims of Massachusetts.Don Pedro Menendez came ashore amid the sounding of trumpets, artillery salutes and the firing of cannons to claim the land for King Philip II and Spain. The ship chaplain Fr. Francisco Lopez de Mendoza Grajales chanted the Te Deum and presented a crucifix that Menendez ceremoniously kissed. Then the 500 soldiers, 200 sailors and 100 families and artisans, along with the Timucuan Indians celebrated the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass in gratitude to God.
    2.The second American Thanksgiving happened on April 30, 1598, when Spanish explorer Don Juan de Oñate requested the friars to say a Mass of Thanksgiving, after which he formally proclaimed “La Toma”, claiming the land north of the Rio Grande for the King of Spain. The men feasted on duck, goose, and fish from the river. The actors among them dressed and presented a play. All this took place twenty-three years before the Pilgrims set sail from England on the Mayflower
    3.The Puritan pilgrims were violently anti-Catholic. They left England because they thought that the Church of England was too Catholic. These Puritans were strict Calvinists. The pilgrims also opposed celebrating Christmas, dancing, musical instruments in church, and even hymns as papistical.
    4.Squanto, the beloved hero of Thanksgiving at Plymouth Rock, was Catholic! (Here’s my full article on the Catholicism of Squanto.) Squanto had been enslaved by the English but he was freed by Spanish Franciscans. Squanto thus received baptism and became a Catholic. So it was a baptized Catholic Native American who orchestrated what became known as Thanksgiving.
    5.So while Thanksgiving may celebrate the Calvinist Separatists who fled England, Catholics might remember the same unjust laws that granted the crown of martyrdom to Thomas More, John Fisher, Edmund Campion, et al. are the same injustices that led the Pilgrims to Plymouth.
    6.And let everyone remember that “Thanksgiving” in Greek is Eucharistia. Thus, the Body and Blood of Christ is the true “Thanksgiving Meal”.
    And don’t forget to raise your wine glass and recite the wonderful limerick of Hilaire Belloc:

    “Wherever the Catholic sun doth shine,
    There’s always laughter and good red wine.
    At least I’ve always found it so.
    Benedicamus Domino!”

    ― Hilaire Belloc

    http://taylormarshall.com/2013/11/6-interesting-catholic-thanksgiving.html

    Offline Machabees

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    Thanksgiving - Protestant Day
    « Reply #4 on: December 01, 2013, 09:13:26 PM »
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  • Quote from: poche
    1.The first American Thanksgiving was actually celebrated on September 8 (feast of the birth of the Blessed Virgin) in 1565 in St. Augustine, Florida. The Native Americans and Spanish settlers held a feast and the Holy Mass was offered. This was 56 years before the Puritan pilgrims of Massachusetts.Don Pedro Menendez came ashore amid the sounding of trumpets, artillery salutes and the firing of cannons to claim the land for King Philip II and Spain. The ship chaplain Fr. Francisco Lopez de Mendoza Grajales chanted the Te Deum and presented a crucifix that Menendez ceremoniously kissed. Then the 500 soldiers, 200 sailors and 100 families and artisans, along with the Timucuan Indians celebrated the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass in gratitude to God.
    2.The second American Thanksgiving happened on April 30, 1598, when Spanish explorer Don Juan de Oñate requested the friars to say a Mass of Thanksgiving, after which he formally proclaimed “La Toma”, claiming the land north of the Rio Grande for the King of Spain. The men feasted on duck, goose, and fish from the river. The actors among them dressed and presented a play. All this took place twenty-three years before the Pilgrims set sail from England on the Mayflower
    3.The Puritan pilgrims were violently anti-Catholic. They left England because they thought that the Church of England was too Catholic. These Puritans were strict Calvinists. The pilgrims also opposed celebrating Christmas, dancing, musical instruments in church, and even hymns as papistical.
    4.Squanto, the beloved hero of Thanksgiving at Plymouth Rock, was Catholic! (Here’s my full article on the Catholicism of Squanto.) Squanto had been enslaved by the English but he was freed by Spanish Franciscans. Squanto thus received baptism and became a Catholic. So it was a baptized Catholic Native American who orchestrated what became known as Thanksgiving.
    5.So while Thanksgiving may celebrate the Calvinist Separatists who fled England, Catholics might remember the same unjust laws that granted the crown of martyrdom to Thomas More, John Fisher, Edmund Campion, et al. are the same injustices that led the Pilgrims to Plymouth.
    6.And let everyone remember that “Thanksgiving” in Greek is Eucharistia. Thus, the Body and Blood of Christ is the true “Thanksgiving Meal”.
    And don’t forget to raise your wine glass and recite the wonderful limerick of Hilaire Belloc:

    “Wherever the Catholic sun doth shine,
    There’s always laughter and good red wine.
    At least I’ve always found it so.
    Benedicamus Domino!”

    ― Hilaire Belloc

    http://taylormarshall.com/2013/11/6-interesting-catholic-thanksgiving.html


    There are many days that Catholics give thanksgiving to the True God as we should, especially on every Sunday to the Blessed Trinity, as the above article gives admittance to, that Nov. 28, 2013 is a particular day of the Protestants.