by Absalom Jones A Thanksgiving Sermon, preached January 1, 1808, in St. Thomas's, or the African
Episcopal, Church, Philadelphia: On Account of the Abolition of the African
slave trade, on that day, by the Congress of the United States.
And the Lord said, I have surely seen the affliction of my people which are in
Egypt, and have heard their cry by reason of their task-masters; for I know
their sorrows; and I am come down to deliver them out of the hand of the
Egyptians. -
EXODUS, iii. 7-8.
THESE words, my brethren, contain a short account of some of the circumstances
which preceded the deliverance of the children of Israel from their captivity
and bondage in Egypt.
They mention, in the first place, their affliction. This consisted in their
privation of liberty: they were slaves to the kings of Egypt, in common with
their other subjects; and they were slaves to their fellow slaves. They were
compelled to work in the open air, in one of the hottest climates [7/8] in the
world; and, probably, without a covering from the burning rays of the sun. Their
work was of a laborious kind: it consisted of making bricks, and travelling,
perhaps to a great distance, for the straw, or stubble, that was a component
part of them. Their work was dealt out to them in tasks, and performed under the
eye of vigilant and rigorous masters, who constantly upbraided them with
idleness. The least deficiency, in the product of their labour, was punished by
beating. Nor was this all. Their food was of the cheapest kind, and contained
but little nourishment: it consisted only of leeks and onions, which grew almost
spontaneously in the land of Egypt. Painful and distressing as these sufferings
were, they constituted the smallest part of their misery. While the fields
resounded with their cries in the day, their huts and hamlets were vocal at
night with their lamentations over their sons; who were dragged from the arms of
their mothers, and put to death by drowning, in order to prevent such an
increase in their population, as to endanger the safety of the state by an
insurrection. In this condition, thus degraded and oppressed, they passed [8/9]
nearly four hundred years. Ah! who can conceive of the measure of their
sufferings, during that time? What tongue, or pen, can compute the number of
their sorrows? To them no morning or evening sun ever disclosed a single charm:
to them, the beauties of spring, and the plenty of autumn had no attractions:
even domestick endearments were scarcely known to them: all was misery; all was
grief; all was despair.
Our text mentions, in the second place that, in this situation, they were not
forgotten by the God of their fathers, and the Father of the human race. Though,
for wise reasons, he delayed to appear in their behalf for several hundred
years; yet he was not indifferent to their sufferings. Our text tells us, that
he saw their affliction, and heard their cry: his eye and his ear were
constantly open to their complaint: every tear they shed, was preserved, and
every groan they uttered, was recorded; in order to testify, at a future day,
against the authors of their oppressions. But our text goes further: it
describes the Judge of the world to be so much moved, with what he saw and what
he heard, that [9/10] he rises from his throne--not to issue a command to the
armies of angels that surrounded him to fly to the relief of his suffering
children--but to come down from heaven, in his own person, in order to deliver
them out of the hands of the Egyptians. Glory to God for this precious record of
his power and goodness: let all the nations of the earth praise him. Clouds and
darkness are round about him, but righteousness and judgment are the habitation
of his throne. O sing unto the Lord a new song, for he hath done marvelous
things: his right hand and his holy arm hath gotten him the victory. He hath
remembered his mercy and truth toward the house of Israel, and all the ends of
the earth shall see the salvation of God.
The history of the world shows us, that the deliverance of the children of
Israel from their bondage, is not the only instance, in which it has pleased God
to appear in behalf of oppressed and distressed nations, as the deliverer of the
innocent, and of those who call upon his name. He is as unchangeable in his
nature and character, as he is in his wisdom and power. The great and blessed
[10/11] event, which we have this day met to celebrate, is a striking proof,
that the God of heaven and earth is the same, yesterday, and to-day, and for
ever. Yes, my brethren, the nations from which most of us have descended, and
the country in which some of us were born, have been visited by the tender mercy
of the Common Father of the human race. He has seen the affliction of our
countrymen, with an eye of pity. He has seen the wicked arts, by which wars have
been fomented among the different tribes of the Africans, in order to procure
captives, for the purpose of selling them for slaves. He has seen ships fitted
out from different ports in Europe and America, and freighted with trinkets to
be exchanged for the bodies and souls of men. He has seen the anguish which has
taken place, when parents have been torn from their children, and children from
their parents, and conveyed, with their hands and feet bound in fetters, on
board of ships prepared to receive them. He has seen them thrust in crowds into
the holds of those ships, where many of them have perished from the want of air.
He has seen such of them as have escaped from that noxious place of confinement,
leap into [11/12] the ocean; with a faint hope of swimming back to their native
shore, or a determination to seek early retreat from their impending misery, in
a watery grave. He has seen them exposed for sale, like horses and cattle, upon
the wharves; or, like bales of goods, in warehouses of West India and American
sea ports. He has seen the pangs of separation between members of the same
family. He has seen them driven into the sugar; the rice, and the tobacco
fields, and compelled to work--in spite of the habits of ease which they derived
from the natural fertility of their own country in the open air, beneath a
burning sun, with scarcely as much clothing upon them as modesty required. He
has seen them faint beneath the pressure of their labours. He has seen them
return to their smoky huts in the evening, with nothing to satisfy their hunger
but a scanty allowance of roots; and these, cultivated for themselves, on that
day only, which God ordained as a day of rest for man and beast. He has seen the
neglect with which their masters have treated their immortal souls; not only in
withholding religious instruction from them, but, in some instances, depriving
them of access to the [12/13] means of obtaining it. He has seen all the
different modes of torture, by means of the whip, the screw, the pincers, and
the red hot iron, which have been exercised upon their bodies, by inhuman
overseers: overseers, did I say? Yes: but not by these only. Our God has seen
masters and mistresses, educated in fashionable life, sometimes take the
instruments of torture into their own hands, and, deaf to the cries and shrieks
of their agonizing slaves, exceed even their overseers in cruelty. Inhuman
wretches! though You have been deaf to their cries and shrieks, they have been
heard in Heaven. The ears of Jehovah have been constantly open to them: He has
heard the prayers that have ascended from the hearts of his people; and he has,
as in the case of his ancient and chosen people the Jews, come down to deliver
our suffering country-men from the hands of their oppressors. He came down into
the United States, when they declared, in the constitution which they framed in
1788, that the trade in our African fellow-men, should cease in the year 1808:
He came down into the British Parliament, when they passed a law to put an end
to the same iniquitous trade in May, 1807: [13/14] He came down into the
Congress of the United States, the last winter, when they passed a similar law,
the operation of which commences on this happy day. Dear land of our ancestors!
thou shalt no more be stained with the blood of thy children, shed by British
and American hands: the ocean shall no more afford a refuge to their bodies,
from impending slavery: nor shall the shores of the British West India islands,
and of the United States, any more witness the anguish of families, parted for
ever by a publick sale. For this signal interposition of the God of mercies, in
behalf of our brethren, it becomes us this day to offer up our united thanks.
Let the song of angels, which was first heard in the air at the birth of our
Saviour, be heard this day in our assembly: Glory to God in the highest, for
these first fruits of peace upon earth, and good will to man: O! let us give
thanks unto the Lord: let us call upon his name, and make known his deeds among
the people. Let us sing psalms unto him and talk of all his wondrous works.
Having enumerated the mercies of God to our nation, it becomes us to ask, what
shall we render [14/15] unto the Lord for them? Sacrifices and burnt offerings
are no longer pleasing to him: the pomp of public worship, and the ceremonies of
a festive day, will find no acceptance with him, unless they are accompanied
with actions that correspond with them. The duties which are inculcated upon us,
by the event we are now celebrating, divide themselves into five heads.
In the first place, Let not our expressions of gratitude to God for his late
goodness and mercy to our countrymen, be confined to this day, nor to this
house: let us carry grateful hearts with us to our places of abode, and to our
daily occupations; and let praise and thanksgivings ascend daily to the throne
of grace, in our families, and in our closets, for what God has done for our
African brethren. Let us not forget to praise him for his mercies to such of our
colour as are inhabitants of this country; particularly, for disposing the
hearts of the rulers of many of the states to pass laws for the abolition of
slavery; for the number and zeal of the friends he has raised up to plead our
cause; and for the privileges, we enjoy, of worshiping God, [15/16] agreeably to
our consciences, in churches of our own. This comely building, erected chiefly
by the generosity of our friends, is a monument of God's goodness to us, and
calls for our gratitude with all the other blessings that have been mentioned.
Secondly, Let us unite, with our thanksgiving, prayer to Almighty God, for the
completion of his begun goodness to our brethren in Africa. Let us beseech him
to extend to all the nations in Europe, the same humane and just spirit towards
them, which he has imparted to the British and American nations. Let us,
further, implore the influence of his divine and holy Spirit, to dispose the
hearts of our legislatures to pass laws, to ameliorate the condition of our
brethren who are still in bondage; also, to dispose their masters to treat them
with kindness and humanity; and, above all things, to favour them with the means
of acquiring such parts of human knowledge, as will enable them to read the holy
scriptures, and understand the doctrines of the Christian religion, whereby they
may become, even while they are the slaves of men, the freemen of the Lord.
[17] Thirdly, Let us conduct ourselves in such a manner as to furnish no cause
of regret to the deliverers of our nation, for their kindness to us. Let us
constantly remember the rock whence we were hewn, and the pit whence we were
digged. Pride was not made for man, in any situation; and, still less, for
persons who have recently emerged from bondage. The Jews, after they entered the
promised land, were commanded, when they offered sacrifices to the Lord, never
to forget their humble origin; and hence, part of the worship that accompanied
their sacrifices consisted in acknowledging, that a Syrian, ready to perish, was
their father: in like manner, it becomes us, publickly and privately, to
acknowledge, that an African slave, ready to perish, was our father or our
grandfather. Let our conduct be regulated by the precepts of the gospel; let us
be sober minded, humble, peaceable, temperate in our meats and drinks, frugal in
our apparel and in the furniture of our houses, industrious in our occupations,
just in all our dealings, and ever ready to honour all men. Let us teach our
children the rudiments of the English language, in order to enable them to
[17/18] acquire a knowledge of useful trades; and, above all things, let us
instruct them in the principles of the gospel of Jesus Christ, whereby they may
become wise unto salvation. It has always been a mystery, Why the impartial
Father of the human race should have permitted the transportation of so many
millions of our fellow creatures to this country, to endure all the miseries of
slavery. Perhaps his design was, that a knowledge of the gospel might be
acquired by some of their descendants, in order that they might become qualified
to be the messengers of it, to the land of their fathers. Let this thought
animate us, when we are teaching our children to love and adore the name of our
Redeemer. Who knows but that a Joseph may rise up among them, who shall be the
instrument of feeding the African nations with the bread of life, and of saving
them, not from earthly bondage, but from the more galling yoke of sin and Satan.
Fourthly, Let us be grateful to our benefactors, who, by enlightening the minds
of the rulers of the earth, by means of their publications and remonstrances
against the trade in our countrymen, have [18/19] produced the great event we
are this day celebrating. Abolition societies and individuals have equal claims
to our gratitude. It would be difficult to mention the names of any of our
benefactors, without offending many whom we do not know. Some of them are gone
to heaven, to receive the reward of their labours of love towards us; and the
kindness and benevolence of the survivors, we hope, are recorded in the book of
life, to be mentioned with honour when our Lord shall come to reward his
faithful servants before an assembled world.
Fifthly, and lastly, Let the first of January, the day of the abolition of the
slave trade in our country, be set apart in every year, as a day of publick
thanksgiving for that mercy. Let the history of the sufferings of our brethren,
and of their deliverance, descend by this means to our children, to the remotest
generations; and when they shall ask, in time to come, saying, What mean the
lessons, the psalms, the prayers and the praises in the worship of this day? let
us answer them, by saying, the Lord, on the day of which this is the
anniversary, abolished the trade which dragged your fathers [19/20] from their
native country, and sold them as bondmen in the United States of America.
Oh thou God of all the nations upon the earth! We thank thee, that thou art no
respecter of persons, and that thou hast made of one blood all nations of men.
We thank thee, that thou hast appeared, in the fulness of time, in behalf of the
nation from which most of the worshipping people, now before thee, are
descended. We thank thee, that the sun of righteousness has at last shed his
morning beams upon them. Rend thy heavens, O Lord, and come down upon the earth;
and grant that the mountains, which now obstruct the perfect day of thy goodness
and mercy towards them, may flow down at thy presence. Send thy gospel, we
beseech thee, among them. May the nations, which now sit in darkness, behold and
rejoice in its light. May Ethiopia soon stretch out her hands unto thee, and lay
hold of the gracious promise of thy everlasting covenant. Destroy, we beseech
thee, all the false religions which now prevail among them; and grant, that they
may soon cast their idols, to the moles and the bats of the wilderness. O,
hasten that [20/21] glorious time, when the knowledge of the gospel of Jesus
Christ, shall cover the earth, as the waters cover the sea; when the wolf shall
dwell with the lamb, and the leopard shall lie down with the kid, and the calf
and the young lion and the fatling together, and a little child shall lead them;
and, when, instead of the thorn, shall come up the fir tree, and, instead of the
brier, shall come up the myrtle tree: and it shall be to the Lord for a name and
for an everlasting sign that shall not be cut off. We pray, O God, for all our
friends and benefactors, in Great Britain, as well as in the United States:
reward them, we beseech thee, with blessings upon earth, and prepare them to
enjoy the fruits of their kindness to us, in thy everlasting kingdom in heaven:
and dispose us, who are assembled in thy presence, to be always thankful for thy
mercies, and to act as becomes a people who owe so much to thy goodness. We
implore thy blessing, O God, upon the President, and all who are in authority in
the United States. Direct them by thy wisdom, in all their deliberations, and O
save thy people from the calamities of war. Give peace in our day, we beseech
thee, O thou God of peace! and grant, that [21/22] this highly favoured country
may continue to afford a safe and peaceful retreat from the calamities of war
and slavery, for ages yet to come. We implore all these blessings and mercies,
only in the name of thy beloved Son, Jesus Christ, our Lord. And now, O Lord, we
desire, with angels and arch-angels, and all the company of heaven, ever more to
praise thee, saying, Holy, holy, holy, Lord God Almighty: the whole earth is
full of thy glory. Amen.
See Also:
Sermon - Thanksgiving - 1795
by Thomas BaldwinThanksgiving Sermon - November 29, 1860
by Benjamin Morgan PalmerWhy Thanksgiving?
by The Ignorant Fishermen BlogA Thanksgiving Sermon based on Luke 17: 11-19
by David Zersen
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