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It
is the duty of nations
as well as of men to own
their dependence upon
the overruling power of
God; to confess their
sins and transgressions
in humble sorrow. Yet
with assured hope that
genuine repentance will
lead to mercy and
pardon; and to recognize
the sublime truth,
announced in the Holy
Scriptures and proven by
all history, that those
nations are blessed
whose God is the Lord.
We know that by His
divine law, nations,
like individuals, are
subjected to punishments
and chastisements in
this world. May we not
justly fear that the
awful calamity of civil
war which now desolates
the land may be a
punishment inflicted
upon us for our
presumptuous sins, to
the needful end of our
national reformation as
a whole people?
We
have been the recipients
of the choicest bounties
of heaven; we have been
preserved these many
years in peace and
prosperity; we have
grown in numbers,
wealth and power as no
other nation has ever
grown. But
we have forever God.
We have forgotten the
gracious hand which
preserved us in peace
and multiplied and
enriched and
strengthened us, and we
have vainly imagined, in
the deceitfulness of our
hearts, that all these
blessings were produced
by some superior wisdom
and virtue of our own.
Intoxicated with
unbroken success, we
have become too
self-sufficient to feel
the necessity of
redeeming and preserving
grace, too proud to pray
to the God that made us.
It has seemed to me fit
and proper that God
should be solemnly,
reverently and
gratefully acknowledged,
as with one heart and
one voice, by the whole
American people. I do
therefore invite my
fellow citizens in every
part of the United
States, and also those
who are at sea and those
who are sojourning in
foreign lands, to set
apart and observe the
last Thursday of
November as a day of
Thanksgiving and praise
to our beneficent Father
who dwelleth in the
heavens.
-
Abraham Lincoln, October
3,
1863


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