Showing posts with label Holidays. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Holidays. Show all posts

March 24, 2021

Greek Independence Day Resource Page


"When we got our weapons, 
first we said for the Faith 
and then for the Nation." 
(General Theodoros Kolokotronis)
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Documentary: "March 25 - Greek Independence Day"

The First Celebration and Location of Greek Independence Day
 
 
 
 

 

June 13, 2020

Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew at the Tomb of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.


On October 31, 1997 Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew was the first religious leader to visit the tomb of Civil Rights Leader Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. in Atlanta, Georgia for a Wreath-Laying Ceremony in his honor at the Martin Luther King Center for Social Change. Present and introducing him was Coretta Scott King.

February 14, 2020

The Myth of the Pagan Origins of Valentine's Day


By John Sanidopoulos

Many of the events and actions of the celebrants on Valentine's Day are derived from the ancient and pagan Roman feast of Lupercalia. One of the customs of the young people in this feast of Lupercalia was name-drawing. On the eve of the festival the names of Roman girls were written on slips of paper and placed into jars. The boys individually drew girls' names from a box, and became paired with them until the following Lupercalia. The girl whose name was chosen was to be the boy's sweetheart during the feast and for the remainder of the year. The activities between the "sweethearts" at the feast was pretty wanton and very sexually oriented. Later, when Catholic priests wanted to abolish heathen customs, they assimilated the pagan custom by "Christianizing" it as a celebration of some "Christian" character or characteristic. In this case they substituted the names of saints for the names of girls in the drawing lot and later Pope Gelasius, who didn't like or believe in the Roman gods, turned the celebration into a church holiday by honoring St. Valentine's death on this day.

If you rely on what the majority of sources say about the history of Valentine's Day, the above summary is pretty much what you will get, often with additions to make the whole history of Valentine's Day appear more seedy and sinister. What you won't read however is the truth, because pretty much everything in the paragraph above is a lie. The truth of the matter is that the origins of Valentine's Day has absolutely nothing to do with a pagan holiday, nor is there anything seedy and sinister about it.

But why does everyone get it so wrong?

It all begins in the year 1756. This is the year Alban Butler published his Lives of the Saints, where we read the following about St. Valentine the Martyr commemorated on February 14th: "To abolish the heathens' lewd superstitious custom of boys drawing the names of girls, in honor of their goddess Februata Juno, on the 15th of this month, several zealous pastors substituted the names of Saints in billets given on this day."

Next we will jump to 1807, when the antiquarian Francis Douce embellished this explanation of Butler by offering a fuller description of the Roman festival, which he assumed to be Lupercalia, saying that it was celebrated "during the great part of the month of February...in honor of Pan and Juno.... On this occasion, amidst a variety of ceremonies, the names of young women were put into a box, from which they were drawn by the men as chance directed." Douce then goes on to repeat Butler's account of the attempt to transform the Roman custom by substituting saint's names. He concluded that "as the festival of the Lupercalia had commenced about the middle of February, [the Christians] appear to have chosen Saint Valentine's day for celebrating the new feast; because it occurred nearly at the same time."

Finally, we come to 1972 when Alfred Kellogg and Robert Cox published Chaucer, Langland, Arthur. These two men offered the most complex version of the story - linking Lupercalia, Valentine and Chaucer. There we read how Pope Gelasius in 495 abolished Lupercalia and replaced it with a Christian festival of comparable importance that took place forty days after the birth of Christ - the Presentation of Christ or Purification of the Virgin or Candlemas celebrated on February 14th. They based this on a study by Cardinal Baronius in the 16th century. When the feast of the Presentation was transferred from February 14th to February 2nd (to accord with the transfer of the Christmas from January 6th to December 25th), Kellog and Cox assume Saint Valentine accidentally became associated with purification and fertility.

This is the history in summary of how Valentine's Day became associated with the pagan festival of Lupercalia.

However, recent scholarship has thoroughly debunked all these claims, which are based on faulty assumptions and misunderstood data. Professor Jack B. Oruch of the University of Kansas ("St. Valentine, Chaucer, and Spring in February," 1981), Henry Ansgar Kelly of the University of California, Los Angeles (Chaucer and the Cult of Saint Valentine, 1986) and Associate Professor Michael Matthew Kaylor of the Masaryk University (Secreted Desires: The Major Uranians: Hopkins, Pater and Wilde, 2006) are the academics and researchers who have dismissed these antiquated claims.

These scholars charge that the traditions associated with "Valentine's Day", first documented in Geoffrey Chaucer's Parlement of Foules and set in the fictional context of an old tradition, did not exist before Chaucer. He argues that the speculative explanation of sentimental customs, posing as historical fact, had their origins among 18th century antiquaries, notably Alban Butler. The claim that the modern customs of Saint Valentine's Day originate from the Roman Lupercalia customs they find to be unconvincing: they say there is no proof that the modern customs of Saint Valentine's Day can be traced to the Lupercalia, and the claim seems to originate from misconceptions about the festivities. They further argue that there is no written record of Pope Gelasius ever intending a replacement of Lupercalia.

Below are some facts to consider:

1. The name Valentine was popular in the Roman Empire. Several emperors and a pope bore the name. It is estimated that about thirty Valentine's and a few Valentina's were recognized as saints, primarily through martyrdom. The two most noteworthy were a Roman priest and the Bishop of Terni, both of whom were supposedly beheaded on February 14th by an emperor named Claudius, and buried on the Flaminian Way within sixty miles of each other. The earliest biographies of these two saints we know of date to the 6th or 7th century.

2. The name Valentine does not appear in the earliest list of Roman martyrs in 354, but there was a Saint Valentine venerated at this time based on the fact that Pope Julius I in the mid-4th century built a basilica to Saint Valentine in Rome. In the seventh century it was a major shrine, the first encountered by pilgrims coming from the north, and the Flaminian Gate nearby was then called the Gate of Saint Valentine. By the 13th century, Saint Valentine was widely venerated, his relics were in various churches, and shrines were built in his honor, including four churches in Rome.

3. The feast of the Presentation of Christ indeed was at one time celebrated on February 14th, but this only took place in the Christian East and never in Rome or the West. Furthermore, by the late 4th century Christians in the East and the West were celebrating Christmas on December 25th, which transferred at that time the feast of the Presentation from February 14th to the 2nd in the East. Pope Gelasius did not institute the feast of the Presentation, nor did he celebrate it on February 14th, nor did he celebrate it at all. In fact, the feast was not celebrated in the West until around the middle of the 7th century.

4. Pope Gelasius had nothing to do with the canonization of St. Valentine nor did he have anything to do with establishing February 14th as a feast of St. Valentine. St. Valentine was probably already honored on February 14th, or this started within a few centuries, but there is no record of associating the feast with Pope Gelasius.

5. There is no doubt that the Lupercalia continued till the time of Pope Gelasius (A.D. 494‑96). It is mentioned by Augustine in the latter part of the City of God (written not far from 426), and it is included in the calendar of the Christian Polemius Silvius, of 448/9. When it was finally abolished by the efforts of Gelasius, he addressed to a group of senators an epistle defending the step, which approximates the length of an apologetic treatise. He admits that the old pagan rite had continued under his predecessors, through the days of Alaric, Anthemius, and Ricimer, and had been abolished only in his own time; but he defends the earlier popes by saying that ills could not be healed at once, and that perhaps they had tried to remove this superstition but had failed to win the support of the imperial court.

6. It must be stated that even in the days of Pope Gelasius, Lupercalia was merely a folk custom, a feeble survival of old pagan Rome in what was then a very Christian Rome. In fact, Lupercalia had entirely lapsed decades before, but the customs revived in order to bring some happiness into the gloomy lives of the people of Rome at the time. When Pope Gelasius condemned this revival, he made absolutely no attempt to replace it with anything nor did he compromise in any way with pagan customs. He merely threatened with excommunication anyone who celebrated the pagan customs.

7. The first time we encounter an association between St. Valentine and love is in Geoffrey Chaucer's Parlement of Foules from the late 14th century. He associated Valentine's Day with the spring mating season of birds. This association immediately gained popularity, striking the literary and poetic imagination in places like England and France. Before Chaucer, St. Valentine was associated with healing sick and handicapped children, but these stories did not inspire the poetic imagination. Chaucer was likely aware that the head of St. Valentine was venerated in the English capital of Winchester, and though the name was not popular in England it was considered beautiful and aristocratic. Valentine's Day therefore began to emerge simply because it coincided with events in nature and the beginning of farming on his feast day (February 14th at that time being equivalent to the weather of late February in modern times) because the weather began to warm.

8. In his 1882 article "St. Valentine's Day," John W. Hales correctly pointed out that the Lupercalia never involved the pairing of lovers or a lottery. The first suggestion of a lottery for lovers on Valentine's Day occurs in the 15th century in the poems of Lydgate and Charles d'Orleans. The only known attempt to suppress the practice and substitute the names of lovers with those of saints was St. Francis de Sales early in his career as bishop at Annecy in 1603. Butler's ideas were prompted, in all probability, by a confused knowledge of the date of this isolated event; a less charitable explanation would attribute his remarks to wishful or pious fantasy.

Much more can be said, but the academic studies on this subject mentioned above can satisfy those with a keen interest in the details. What we do find is that there are still modern scholars and hundreds of internet articles who subscribe to the false beliefs about Valentine's Day that have been thoroughly refuted since at least the 1980's. The problem is that when people write about a subject, they repeat rumors and myths without checking the facts. Checking the facts requires research, and research takes time because you have to base your findings on original sources. Fortunately for us, this research has been done by accomplished scholars, and from now on there should be no excuse for lazy writers in associating Valentine's Day with myths and false information.



November 28, 2019

The Akathist Hymn "Glory to God for All Things", or the Akathist of Thanksgiving

Metropolitan Tryphon of Turkestan

This Akathist, also called the "Akathist of Thanksgiving," was found among the belongings of Protopresbyter Gregory Petrov upon his death in a prison camp in 1940. The title is from the words of Saint John Chrysostom as he was dying in exile. It is a song of praise from amidst the most terrible sufferings attributed to Metropolitan Tryphon of Turkestan.

January 5, 2017

A New Year, A New Beginning (Monk Moses the Athonite)


By Monk Moses the Athonite

Every new beginning is a joy. It is a new start. A bright sun that rises with meaning and hope. Every new start is an enjoyable contest. The new year creates assessment, thoughts, plans, programs, emotional enthusiasm. A responsible struggle is essential for these things. Every beginning renews us significantly. We forget the old and extend towards the new.

Saint John Chrysostom beautifully teaches how the year will pass pleasantly if you happily do the divine will. If you work righteousness, your day will be good. If you sin, your day will be wicked, disturbing and dark. If you believe in virtue and practice it, your entire year will go well. But if you neglect virtue and depend on the number of days, you will remain desolate and poor of all good things.

January 1, 2017

New Year's Day Resource Page


 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 


December 31, 2016

New Year Resolutions and Time as an Opportunity

In this image, we see Death, represented by a skeleton, trying to extinguish the candle of life. On the opposite side of the candle is Father Time, hourglass in hand, attempting to prevent Death from putting out the candle. From the gravestone of Rebecca Gerrish, located at King’s Chapel Burying Ground in Boston.

By Dr. Nikolaos Koios

In the Western world there’s a continuing tradition of making resolutions at the turn of each year. In a sense, people want to commit to resolutions that’ll help them become ‘better’. We can see two aspects to this attractive custom: 1) the intention and the opportunity for people to keep their resolutions; and 2) the content of the resolutions and commitments. Both of these factors are of great importance. If you can’t keep to what you’ve promised yourself, then setting even the most noble ideal as a goal is pointless. And if the resolution’s something that, in the end, doesn’t make you any better, then committing to it might actually work against you rather than for you. But there’s also another factor: time. We’re under pressure from time. Our resolutions have to be kept within time. And people today are less willing than ever to allow time for the attainment of their goals, for keeping the promises they’ve made to themselves.

November 24, 2016

Quotes of Orthodox Saints on Thanksgiving


"Have no anxiety about anything, but in everything by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made known to God."

- St. Paul the Apostle

November 23, 2016

Thanksgiving Resource Page


"Give thanks in all circumstances, for this is God's will for you in Christ Jesus" (1 Thess. 5:18).

"Whether, then, you eat, or drink, or do anything, do all to the glory of God" (1 Cor. 10:31).

"For everything God created is good, and nothing is to be rejected if it is received with thanksgiving, because it is consecrated by the word of God and prayer" (1 Tim. 4:4-5).

 
 

July 16, 2016

"Neurotic" Orthodoxy in America


By Fr. Alexander Schmemann

Today's Orthodox young people do not have that immigrant mentality. Orthodoxy for them is not primarily the remembrance of childhood abroad. They will not keep Orthodoxy simply because it is "the faith of their fathers." Suppose we apply this principle to others: Then the Lutherans should keep the Lutheran faith, the Jews the Jewish faith, and finally, the son of an atheist should keep atheism because it was the "faith of his father." If this is the criterion, religion becomes a mere cultural continuity.

November 25, 2015

Thanksgiving and Supplication Prayer for the Church and Clergy


By Metropolitan Hierotheos of Nafapaktos and Agiou Vlasiou

We live in a time in which much is said and written about the Church, the Bishops and the Clergy in general. We forget, however, to do something better, which is to pray for the Church, especially for the Bishops. This is because, unfortunately, we are influenced by a secular spirit and we think that all issues are solved only with protest and anthropocentric actions.

I remember a certain pious lady who everyday would pray for the Patriarchs, Bishops, Priests, Monks and Missionaries that God would strengthen them in their work and mission. Indeed, those who work in the Lord's vineyard have much need, some to be strengthened in their struggles, others to endure slanders and persecutions, others to bring to repentance and shepherd their flock, in accordance with ecclesiastical tradition, etc.

January 8, 2014

The Neurosis of the Holidays


By His Eminenece Metropolitan Hierotheos
of Nafpaktos and Agiou Vlasiou

Now that the Twelve Days [of Christmas and Theophany] have passed we must remember an interesting view of the great psychotherapist Victor Frankl that is related to the different types of neuroses, which are associated with the so-called noögenic neuroses.

In the works of this great psychotherapist he makes a distinction between psychogenic neuroses, which are reduced to the psychological field, and noögenic neuroses, which is associated with the noological dimension of human existence, namely the acquisition of meaning for life. He presents the truth that people today are suffering mainly because they have no meaning in their life, which manifests itself in many ways.

Among the various neuroses he includes "Sunday neurosis", which is when a person realizes their existential vacuum, exactly when "the burden of the busy week ends on Sunday, and the emptiness inside him suddenly appears." That is, when a person all week with continuous busyness and employment tries to forget this existential vacuum, forgetting that their life is meaningless. Thus, when they stop this activity, then they are occupied by melancholy, pain and with terrible consequences in their existence.

We could extend this aspect of Frankl, arguing that we observe many times the people around us holding on to the neurosis of the holidays. What he realized in regards to Sunday, is also noticeable during the major holidays of Christendom, such as Christmas, Easter, etc.

Apart from what Frankl says as to what takes place on Sundays, on major holidays we observe the same situations. People, especially here in Greece, prepare for the great feasts of Christmas and Easter. They think they will find something to satisfy their existential hunger and thirst. But they are not looking for it from the depths of their heart and approaching the deeper and true meaning of the events of the holiday. These involve repentance, humility, mental preparation, Confession and Holy Communion. Rather they focus on the external aspects, such as the purchasing of various items, traveling, making visitations, and the festive table. It is true, of course, that these external standard procedures do not satisfy a persons spiritual state of being, and thus the existential vacuum or emptiness remains.

Therefore, while a person expects the holidays to answer their existential questions, in regards to matters of life and death, yet they do not achieve it, since they remain on the surface and do not go deep into the events. This just leads to melancholy, despair and emptiness. It has been noted by many that during the festive season bickering takes place among families, crimes increase and psychic traumas grow. All of this is explained through this perspective, since on these major days man fails to give rest to his spirit, despite the vivid nostalgia and search.

One way to avoid the pain of the neurosis of the holidays is to follow the entire teaching of the Church with the forty-day preparation for the feasts. And of course, to participate as much as we can in the worship services.

Source: Ekklesiastiki Paremvasi, "Η νεύρωση των εορτών", January 1998. Translated by John Sanidopoulos.



October 31, 2013

Halloween Resource Page



This page has moved to the following link:


October 24, 2013

May 12, 2013

Mother's Day and the Church


By Petros Panagiotopoulos

Today is Mother's Day and children throughout the earth have an opportunity to remember and honor their mother. Besides these there are also several challengers who see the introduction of this "celebration" as a marketing event, or others who believe that the sanctity of a mother is such that it belongs to every day of the year and not just a special one.

The Church displays the person of the Panagia as the mother par excellence and subtly commemorates the feast of the Presentation (February 2nd) as the day in which a mother is to be honored.

Furthermore, in our tradition we encounter the very Church as a mother, who gives birth to us and regenerates us in Christ, leading us to salvation. This does not mean, however, that there is some contradistinction: the wisdom and obedience of the Theotokos is considered the center of the Church. In her person we encounter the Mystery of the Divine Economy, says St. John of Damascus. And her free acceptance of God's will opened the path for humanities return to the divine embrace. The Incarnation of God the Word which took place in her womb, brought to reality the union of the divine with human. The Church, therefore, treads down history as a "continuous Theotokos" (Paul Evdokimov).

The Panagia is an eternal model of a mother, who sympathizes and co-suffers with every person in pain and is both a shelter and comfort for all the persecuted. The sad icon of the sword that pierced her as she watched her Son suffer for humanity, makes her a person par excellence of compassion and philanthropy. She is the archtypal mother, aching and caring for her children for the grief and injustice which prevails in the world, continually sighing for suffering man. In her person mothers primarily find a unique assistant and absolute understanding in their concern for the future of their children and that of the whole world. In wars it is mothers who die, says the poet.

For these reasons, the ecclesiastical proposal is to eminently honor the person of the mother.

Source: Translated by John Sanidopoulos

November 22, 2012

History of the Many First Thanksgivings


June Hunt
November 19, 2012

Thanksgiving Day in the United States abounds with historic images of black-hatted, silver-buckled Pilgrims joining Native Americans in an outdoor New England feast of wild fowl, fish and grain. Certainly today's Thanksgiving feast is inspired by the traditional stories about the Pilgrims, but this celebration isn't exactly the very first American Thanksgiving.

Consider this: The 1564 French Huguenots in Florida ... the 1598 Spanish conquistadors near present-day El Paso ... the 1610 Virginia settlers of Jamestown – they all hold claim to celebrating the "first" Thanksgiving in North America before the arrival of the Pilgrims in Massachusetts.

Picture the French Huguenots in Florida – 1564

After building Fort Caroline to establish a settlement on the St. John's River near Jacksonville, French Protestants joined with local Indians in celebration. This simple event involved a modest feast, prayer and music. One of the French officers wrote: "We sang a psalm of Thanksgiving unto God, beseeching Him that it would please His Grace to continue His accustomed goodness toward us." But due to conflict with Spain over possession of the territory, the settlement was destroyed within a few years.

Picture the Spanish Conquistadors in Texas – 1598

Led by Juan de Onate, an expedition of about 500 crossed the Chihuahuan Desert to reach the Rio Grande River. After their harrowing journey across the wasteland, they rested on the banks of the river, offered thanks to God and feasted. Their journey and colonization was the start of European settlements in the American Southwest.

Picture the Virginia Settlers in Jamestown – 1610

The early years of the Jamestown settlement were marked by famine, disease and death. After the winter of 1609-1610, a population that had reached nearly 500 was reduced to about 60 settlers. When ships arrived carrying food in the spring of 1610, the settlers responded with a spontaneous prayer service.

The Traditional Picture of the Massachusetts Pilgrims

In November of 1620 after a voyage totaling more than 3,000 miles, dissenters from the Church of England, commonly known as Pilgrims, landed at Cape Cod to establish a new settlement and exercise religious freedom. The first winter and spring was a trying time for the colonists as disease, cramped quarters and bitter cold all took a toll.

In the early months of their quest, 50 of the 102 settlers died with only a handful remaining unscathed by the harsh environment.4 By the summer and autumn of 1621, the Pilgrims rebounded and gathered a bountiful harvest while enjoying plentiful fishing and hunting. Nearly 100 Native Americans joined 52 Englishmen to feast for three days to celebrate the harvest and God's blessings.

The Role of Abraham Lincoln

Thanksgiving proclamations were sporadically made by presidents and governors, but in 1863, President Abraham Lincoln established a day for giving thanks as a national tradition. Desiring to unite a nation torn apart by war, Lincoln wrote of prosperity, population increase and emerging harmony as signs of God's mercy even in the face of battle.

This president called all Americans to "a day of Thanksgiving and Praise to our beneficent Father who dwelleth in the Heavens," while asking God to bring peace as well as to tenderly care for widows, orphans and all those who were suffering because of the Civil War.

Our Historic Thanksgiving Heritage

Americans are a unique combination of diverse cultures and traditions, evidenced by several competing "first" Thanksgivings. Our nation has a rich heritage that recognizes God's sovereign rule, offering gratitude to Him even in times of adversity. Thanksgiving to God is the common element that links the early French, Spanish and English settlers as well as Americans of the Civil War period.

No matter where you are or whatever your needs, take time to be grateful. When we come to God with our requests and concerns filtered through thanksgiving, the Bible makes it plain – we will receive the peace only He can give, a peace that passes all understanding.

Remember what the apostle Paul wrote, while chained under house arrest, "Do not be anxious about anything, but in every situation, by prayer and petition, with thanksgiving, present your requests to God. And the peace of God, which transcends all understanding, will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus" (Philippians 4:6-7 NIV).

May 13, 2012

A Letter of Valeriu Gafencu To His Mother


7 March 1946

My beloved mom, I saw you in the heart of Norika [his sister], when she visited. You were good, gentle, very understanding. I remained silent and looked within myself. There I found love ... Today I'm so happy! I look calmly at my life and life around the world and see God's intervention in everything. I look at our lives and see the miracle of God.

My dear mom, I feel you so much! Tell me mom that you feel my love! Tell me mom that you always feel me by your side! Tell me mom you're happy! I have so much to tell you, mom! At night I wake up from sleep and pray. I send my thoughts to my mom and then there is so much peace within me! And I feel my dad, I feel the endless love. And I often think of the love you had for my father. What a beautiful family you have created! And what beautiful love!

Mom, remember the summer days when I was a student in high school and we were walking together in our garden, among the trees. I remember what thoughts you had and you told me about my future.

My primary thoughts then were that I would become a man of great value. I meant by this to become a man who played a great role in history and bring many good things to the nation. I wanted to do much good in the world, but man plans and God decides. Life has followed its rapid and imposing journey. I arrived by myself to the University in Iasi. There I saw that truly there is opened for me a great future. I lived a normal life, I was one of the most gifted students, a friend of all, with an unusual thirst for the ideals of a new world, in which govern love and justice, the perfect harmony.

Well, I arrived in prison. I knew that my prison life would bring, through suffering and isolation from the world, many problems. I do believe that I suffer for the truth. This circumstance has brought to my soul a deep peace. I was satisfactorily fulfilling the course of my ideal.


And, my beloved mother, I want you to know that I have suffered much. The first winter I would wake up at night from my sleep, and the loneliness of my incarceration, cold and hungry, I would look into the darkness and whispering low, so that I only heard myself, but loud enough for God to hear: "Mom, I'm cold, hungry!"

At first it was very difficult. But God was always with me. He did not forsake me even a moment. I began to confront my bodily sufferings, and slowly began to savor new joys. I saw that I am a sinful man. I am appalled by my sins and my weaknesses. I realized then that I, who wished with all my heart for an ideal world, was a sinner. Therefore, I first had to become a pure new man. And so I began to war with the evil that was inside me.

Slowly there descended upon me the light of truth. I began to live the happiness in pain. And the hole in my heart was overfilled by Christ, my great love. And I realized then that truly great is he who has this great love, though he seems small. Today I am happy. Through Christ I love everyone. It is a difficult journey for these things to be accepted and known by the people! But I am very convinced that it is the only path that leads to happiness.

Translated by John Sanidopoulos

December 24, 2011

Greeks, Jews & Hanukkah - A Story That Still Needs To Be Told



Presented by: The American Jewish Committee and The Greek Orthodox Metropolis of Boston. 15 Dec 2011 at Hebrew College, Newton, MA.

Opening welcome and remarks by Rob Leikind - AJC Boston Director, Panayota Katsarou - Acting Consul General of Greece, and His Eminence Metropolitan Methodios of Boston.

Panel discussion with:

Shaye J.D. Cohen, Littauer Professor of Hebrew Literature and Philosophy, Harvard University

Fr. George Dragas, Professor of Patristics, Holy Cross Greek Orthodox School of Theology

November 24, 2011

Top 10 Myths About Thanksgiving


By Rick Shenkman

MYTH # 1
The Pilgrims Held the First Thanksgiving

To see what the first Thanksgiving was like you have to go to: Texas. Texans claim the first Thanksgiving in America actually took place in little San Elizario, a community near El Paso, in 1598 -- twenty-three years before the Pilgrims' festival. For several years they have staged a reenactment of the event that culminated in the Thanksgiving celebration: the arrival of Spanish explorer Juan de Onate on the banks of the Rio Grande. De Onate is said to have held a big Thanksgiving festival after leading hundreds of settlers on a grueling 350-mile long trek across the Mexican desert.

Then again, you may want to go to Virginia.. At the Berkeley Plantation on the James River they claim the first Thanksgiving in America was held there on December 4th, 1619....two years before the Pilgrims' festival....and every year since 1958 they have reenacted the event. In their view it's not the Mayflower we should remember, it's the Margaret, the little ship which brought 38 English settlers to the plantation in 1619. The story is that the settlers had been ordered by the London company that sponsored them to commemorate the ship's arrival with an annual day of Thanksgiving. Hardly anybody outside Virginia has ever heard of this Thanksgiving, but in 1963 President Kennedy officially recognized the plantation's claim.

MYTH # 2
Thanksgiving Was About Family

If by Thanksgiving, you have in mind the Pilgrim festival, forget about it being a family holiday. Put away your Norman Rockwell paintings. Turn off Bing Crosby. Thanksgiving was a multicultural community event. If it had been about family, the Pilgrims never would have invited the Indians to join them.

MYTH # 3
Thanksgiving Was About Religion

No it wasn't. Paraphrasing the answer provided above, if Thanksgiving had been about religion, the Pilgrims never would have invited the Indians to join them. Besides, the Pilgrims would never have tolerated festivities at a true religious event. Indeed, what we think of as Thanksgiving was really a harvest festival. Actual"Thanksgivings" were religious affairs; everybody spent the day praying. Incidentally, these Pilgrim Thanksgivings occurred at different times of the year, not just in November.

MYTH # 4
The Pilgrims Ate Turkey

What did the Pilgrims eat at their Thanksgiving festival? They didn't have corn on the cob, apples, pears, potatoes or even cranberries. No one knows if they had turkey, although they were used to eating turkey. The only food we know they had for sure was deer. 11(And they didn't eat with a fork; they didn't have forks back then.)

So how did we get the idea that you have turkey and cranberry and such on Thanksgiving? It was because the Victorians prepared Thanksgiving that way. And they're the ones who made Thanksgiving a national holiday, beginning in 1863, when Abe Lincoln issued his presidential Thanksgiving proclamations...two of them: one to celebrate Thanksgiving in August, a second one in November. Before Lincoln Americans outside New England did not usually celebrate the holiday. (The Pilgrims, incidentally, didn't become part of the holiday until late in the nineteenth century. Until then, Thanksgiving was simply a day of thanks, not a day to remember the Pilgrims.)

MYTH # 5
The Pilgrims Landed on Plymouth Rock

According to historian George Willison, who devoted his life to the subject, the story about the rock is all malarkey, a public relations stunt pulled off by townsfolk to attract attention. What Willison found out is that the Plymouth Rock legend rests entirely on the dubious testimony of Thomas Faunce, a ninety-five year old man, who told the story more than a century after the Mayflower landed. Unfortunately, not too many people ever heard how we came by the story of Plymouth Rock. Willison's book came out at the end of World War II and Americans had more on their minds than Pilgrims then. So we've all just gone merrily along repeating the same old story as if it's true when it's not. And anyway, the Pilgrims didn't land in Plymouth first. They first made landfall at Provincetown. Of course, the people of Plymouth stick by hoary tradition. Tour guides insist that Plymouth Rock is THE rock.

MYTH # 6
Pilgrims Lived in Log Cabins

No Pilgrim ever lived in a log cabin. The log cabin did not appear in America until late in the seventeenth century, when it was introduced by Germans and Swedes. The very term"log cabin" cannot be found in print until the 1770s. Log cabins were virtually unknown in England at the time the Pilgrims arrived in America. So what kind of dwellings did the Pilgrims inhabit? As you can see if you visit Plimoth Plantation in Massachusetts, the Pilgrims lived in wood clapboard houses made from sawed lumber.

MYTH # 7
Pilgrims Dressed in Black

Not only did they not dress in black, they did not wear those funny buckles, weird shoes, or black steeple hats. So how did we get the idea of the buckles? Plimoth Plantation historian James W. Baker explains that in the nineteenth century, when the popular image of the Pilgrims was formed, buckles served as a kind of emblem of quaintness. That's the reason illustrators gave Santa buckles. Even the blunderbuss, with which Pilgrims are identified, was a symbol of quaintness. The blunderbuss was mainly used to control crowds. It wasn't a hunting rifle. But it looks out of date and fits the Pilgrim stereotype.

MYTH # 8
Pilgrims, Puritans -- Same Thing

Though even presidents get this wrong -- Ronald Reagan once referred to Puritan John Winthrop as a Pilgrim -- Pilgrims and Puritans were two different groups. The Pilgrims came over on the Mayflower and lived in Plymouth. The Puritans, arriving a decade later, settled in Boston. The Pilgrims welcomed heterogeneousness. Some (so-called"strangers") came to America in search of riches, others (so-called"saints") came for religious reasons. The Puritans, in contrast, came over to America strictly in search of religious freedom. Or, to be technically correct, they came over in order to be able to practice their religion freely. They did not welcome dissent. That we confuse Pilgrims and Puritans would have horrified both. Puritans considered the Pilgrims incurable utopians. While both shared the belief that the Church of England had become corrupt, only the Pilgrims believed it was beyond redemption. They therefore chose the path of Separatism. Puritans held out the hope the church would reform.

MYTH # 9
Puritans Hated Sex

Actually, they welcomed sex as a God-given responsibility. When one member of the First Church of Boston refused to have conjugal relations with his wife two years running, he was expelled. Cotton Mather, the celebrated Puritan minister, condemned a married couple who had abstained from sex in order to achieve a higher spirituality. They were the victims, he wrote, of a"blind zeal."

MYTH # 10
Puritans Hated Fun

H.L. Mencken defined Puritanism as "the haunting fear that someone, somewhere, may be happy!" Actually, the Puritans welcomed laughter and dressed in bright colors (or, to be precise, the middle and upper classes dressed in bright colors; members of the lower classes were not permitted to indulge themselves -- they dressed in dark clothes). As Carl Degler long ago observed,"The Sabbatarian, antiliquor, and antisex attitudes usually attributed to the Puritans are a nineteenth-century addition to the much more moderate and wholesome view of life's evils held by the early settlers of New England."

Source

Read also: Orthodox Christians and Thanksgiving

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