[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 146 (Thursday, November 15, 2012)]
[House]
[Page H6373]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
THANKSGIVING
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Missouri (Mr. Akin) for 5 minutes.
Mr. AKIN. Mr. Speaker, in just about a week or so, we're going to be
sitting down at tables celebrating Thanksgiving and eating turkey and
getting a little sleepy maybe afterwards. But as we think about
Thanksgiving and we think about the holiday of Thanksgiving Day, it may
be interesting and it may add a little richness to that holiday if we
remember how it came about and what we have to be thankful for.
There were originally a group of people that came to this country on
the Mayflower, and a number of them onboard had the dream of building a
new kind of country, something that Europe had never seen before. They
believed that they would take principles that they found in the Bible
and that they would apply them in a new way and create a new structure
of what a country could look like.
So they came to America. And after landing, within the first 4
months, half of them had died. And you would think they would pretty
much give up on a dream at that point. The Mayflower had stayed to give
them some protection and shelter, so it was in the early springtime
that this group of the people that were left--about 55 of the
Pilgrims--had to make a decision. You could think of it as actually
voting, only voting with their feet.
They were approached by the captain of the Mayflower, and the captain
of the Mayflower said, Things aren't going so well. I've lost half my
crew, and half of you are dead, and we are going to be heading back to
England. And I recommend that you get on the Mayflower because you
don't have adequate supplies, and you don't have really a knowledge of
how you're going to be able to deal with the wilderness that you are
living in.
So it was that the Mayflower's captain gave the commands, the old
seaweed-covered anchor cable was hauled onboard, the yardarms were
trimmed to the wind, and first large and then small, the Mayflower
disappears over the horizon. The wind is blowing through the trees, and
55 courageous men, women, and children stood on the beach.
Why did they stay? They stayed because they believed in the dream
that they had in their hearts, of making a new nation. And by staying,
they gave us some things that we should be thankful for, not just the
Thanksgiving turkey.
First of all, they came with the idea that civil government and
church government were separate types of governments, and the civil
government shouldn't run the church or the other way around.
{time} 1020
So they were what was called in those days ``separatists'' because
they wanted to separate from the King of England who was running the
Church.
So the first thing they gave us was the concept of separating civil
and church governments. But the second thing that happened was, when
they arrived in Massachusetts, they were blown off course by the
storms; and so they had no government. So a group of free people, under
God, wrote a document called the Mayflower Compact. It starts: ``In the
name of God,'' and it goes on to say to frame just and equal laws.
So what happened was a group of free people, under God, created a
civil government, and that of course was the foundation of our
Declaration of Independence. And all of American civil government we
can trace back to these courageous 55 people who stayed on the beach.
So as you're having your turkey, think about how they gave us the
idea of separating civil and church governments, and also how it was
that they gave us the idea that our Creator gives us life, liberty, and
the pursuit of happiness.
Have a great Thanksgiving. God bless you.
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