Thanksgiving, Man's Daily Holiday
Donald Cantrell
Psalms 100: 1 - 5
Psa 100:1 KJV - [[A Psalm of praise.]] Make a joyful noise unto the LORD, all ye lands.
Psa 100:2 KJV - Serve the LORD with gladness: come before his presence with singing.
Psa 100:3 KJV - 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.
Psa 100:4 KJV - Enter into his gates with thanksgiving, [and] into his courts with praise: be thankful unto him, [and] bless his name.
Psa 100:5 KJV - For the LORD [is] good; his mercy [is] everlasting; and his truth [endureth] to all generations.
I - The Volume and Vastness of Our Praise (1 - 2)
A) One's Encompassing Expression (1)
B) One's Enthusiastic Entrance (2)
II - The Knowledge and Keeper of Our Praise (3)
A) An Affirmative Statement (3a)
B) An Awesome Shepherd (3a)
III - The Path and Proclamation of Our Praise (4)
A) The Visibility of One's Praises
B) The Vocalization of One's Praises
IV - The Assurance and Affirmation of Our Praise (5)
A) A Precious Fact (5a)
B) A Promising Future (5b)
Theme: ''We have the blessed privilege of being thankful every day''
I have been reading the book ''The Greatest Generation'' by Tom Brokaw and found something that really got my attention. In the book, the writer tells of some famous times in the history of WWII, but he also has some stories on some infamous times of shame in our history.
I came across the story of Nao Takasugi, who was a natural born citizen he was an American with a Japanese ancestry. Nao's family arrived in America in 1903 and his grandfather could not apply for citizenship due to his Asian ancestry. The war broke out between America and Japan, it was then that our president decided to invoke his executive powers, so he wrote what is now called ''Executive Order 9066'' on February 19th, 1942.
At the bidding of the president, the ACLU, newspaper columnist Walter Lip ...
Donald Cantrell
Psalms 100: 1 - 5
Psa 100:1 KJV - [[A Psalm of praise.]] Make a joyful noise unto the LORD, all ye lands.
Psa 100:2 KJV - Serve the LORD with gladness: come before his presence with singing.
Psa 100:3 KJV - 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.
Psa 100:4 KJV - Enter into his gates with thanksgiving, [and] into his courts with praise: be thankful unto him, [and] bless his name.
Psa 100:5 KJV - For the LORD [is] good; his mercy [is] everlasting; and his truth [endureth] to all generations.
I - The Volume and Vastness of Our Praise (1 - 2)
A) One's Encompassing Expression (1)
B) One's Enthusiastic Entrance (2)
II - The Knowledge and Keeper of Our Praise (3)
A) An Affirmative Statement (3a)
B) An Awesome Shepherd (3a)
III - The Path and Proclamation of Our Praise (4)
A) The Visibility of One's Praises
B) The Vocalization of One's Praises
IV - The Assurance and Affirmation of Our Praise (5)
A) A Precious Fact (5a)
B) A Promising Future (5b)
Theme: ''We have the blessed privilege of being thankful every day''
I have been reading the book ''The Greatest Generation'' by Tom Brokaw and found something that really got my attention. In the book, the writer tells of some famous times in the history of WWII, but he also has some stories on some infamous times of shame in our history.
I came across the story of Nao Takasugi, who was a natural born citizen he was an American with a Japanese ancestry. Nao's family arrived in America in 1903 and his grandfather could not apply for citizenship due to his Asian ancestry. The war broke out between America and Japan, it was then that our president decided to invoke his executive powers, so he wrote what is now called ''Executive Order 9066'' on February 19th, 1942.
At the bidding of the president, the ACLU, newspaper columnist Walter Lip ...
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