Reflections on Art from 100 Years Ago

Thanksgiving at Plymouth

By Fr. Peter Fennessy, SJ

Jennie Augusta Brownscombe, (detail) Thanksgiving at Plymouth (1925), oil on canvas, original 30 × 39.13 inches, National Museum of Women in the Arts, Washington, D.C.

Colonists in New England and Canada regularly celebrated days of prayer and thanksgiving. Jennie Augusta Brownscombe’s “Thanksgiving at Plymouth” depicts Plymouth Colony’s first harvest feast in 1621, often thought to be the origin of our Thanksgiving. Although Native Americans attended this celebration, Brownscombe may have been making a point when she huddled them together so far to the side. Thanksgiving is not a happy feast for Native Americans.

Christians believe gratitude is appropriate every day. Each day at the Eucharist (Greek for “thanksgiving”) most Prefaces begin, “It is truly right and just, our duty and our salvation, always and everywhere to give You thanks, Father most holy, through Your beloved Son, Jesus Christ.” Saint Paul writes, “In all circumstances give thanks, for this is the will of God for you in Christ Jesus” (1 Thessalonians 5:18). Saint Ignatius, in the final Contemplation of his Spiritual Exercises, says that all things around and within us are gifts from God, for which we ought to be grateful. For Ignatius, ingratitude was the greatest of all sins. We should make our own the prayer of Dag Hammarskjöld that begins, “For all that has been—Thanks!”

Manresa celebrates 100th Anniversary

Outdoor Mass on Manresa Grounds September 28 to Launch Observances

Bloomfield Hills, MI – September 1, 2025 – Manresa Jesuit Retreat House held its first retreat on the weekend of September 23-26, 1926. This year on September 28, Manresa begins a year-long celebration called “Sacred Encounters: Yesterday, Today, Tomorrow” to mark 100 years of helping men and women grow spiritually through prayer, reflection, guidance and teaching according to the Ignatian tradition.

The festivities begin with an Outdoor Mass at 2:00 PM on Sunday, September 28, 2025. They continue with a banquet on May 7, 2026, with Detroit Archbishop Edward Weisenburger as keynote speaker, and an Outdoor Mass and Picnic on September 20, 2026. Retreatants and guests are invited to each special event to honor our past, celebrate our present and look ahead to our future.

“For a century, Manresa has been a sanctuary for countless individuals who have found spiritual renewal and deeper connection with God,” said Sr. Linda Sevcik, SM, Executive Director of Manresa since 2021. “The spirituality of Saint Ignatius continues to guide Manresa’s mission, and our house and grounds offer a quiet and safe space where thousands of people each year come to encounter the Sacred and experience the transformative power of the Spiritual Exercises of St. Ignatius of Loyola.”

From its beginning as a retreat center for men, Manresa has grown into a spirituality center offering retreats and programs for men, women and youth.

Building on the legacy of the past 100 years and looking forward to the next 100 years of serving those who seek to deepen their faith, Manresa Jesuit Retreat House stands as a sign of God’s presence in our midst.

About Manresa: Manresa Jesuit Retreat House is a Catholic retreat center that helps men and women grow spiritually through prayer, reflection, guidance and teaching according to the tradition of St. Ignatius of Loyola. This is accomplished through group retreats, individually directed retreats, the Spiritual Exercises in Daily Life, days of prayer and recollection, and various programs including Scripture study and formation in Ignatian spirituality. For more information about Manresa’s 100th Anniversary celebration, visit manresa-sj.org/100Years.

# # #

Manresa Jesuit Retreat House

1390 Quarton Road, Bloomfield Hills, Michigan 48304-3554

www.manresa-sj.org