Proclamation 5767 --
National Day of Prayer, 1988
By
the President of the
A
Proclamation
Americans
in every generation have turned to their Maker in prayer. In adoration and in thanksgiving,
in contrition and in supplication, we have acknowledged both our dependence on
Almighty God and the help He offers us as individuals and as a Nation. In every
circumstance, whether peril or plenty, whether war or peace, whether gladness
or mourning, we have searched for and sought God's presence and His power, His
blessings and His protection, His freedom and His peace, for ourselves, for our
children, and for our beloved land.
That
was surely so at the very beginning of our Nation, in the earliest days of our
quest for independence and liberty. It could only be thus, for a people who
recognized God as the Author of freedom; who cherished the ancient but ever new
words of Leviticus, ``Proclaim liberty throughout all the land unto all the inhabitants
thereof'' and who cast those words where they would ring out forever, on the
Liberty Bell; who affirmed along with Thomas Jefferson that the God Who gave us
life gave us liberty as well.
So
did they believe, those who gathered in Carpenters' Hall
in
``I
can hear the prayer,'' he said, of anyone ``of piety and virtue who is . . . a
friend to his country.'' He went on to suggest that a clergyman of a persuasion
other than his own open the First Continental Congress with prayer.
And
so it happened. Because Sam Adams gave voice to all the goodness, the genius,
and the generosity that make up the American spirit, the First Continental
Congress made its first act a prayer -- the beginning of a great tradition.
We
have, then, a lesson from the Founders of our land, those giants of soul and
intellect whose courageous pledge of life and fortune and sacred honor, and
whose ``firm reliance on the protection of Divine Providence,'' have ever
guided and inspired Americans and all who would fan freedom's mighty flames and
live in ``freedom's holy light.'' That lesson is clear -- that in the winning
of freedom and in the living of life, the first step is prayer.
Let
us join together, Americans all, throughout our land. Let us join together, in
factories and farms, in homes and offices, in places of governance and places
of worship, and in outposts everywhere that service men and women defend us.
Let us, young and old, join together, as did the First Continental Congress, in
the first step -- humble, heartfelt prayer. Let us do so for the love of God
and His great goodness, in search of His guidance and the grace of repentance,
in seeking His blessings, His peace, and the resting of His kind and holy hands
on ourselves, our Nation, our friends in the defense of freedom, and all
mankind, now and always.
By
joint resolution of the Congress approved
Now,
Therefore, I, Ronald Reagan, President of the
In
Witness Whereof, I have hereunto set my hand this third day of February, in the
year of our Lord nineteen hundred and eighty-eight, and of the
Ronald
Reagan
[Filed with the Office
of the Federal Register,