Out of the Box Thoughts on Thanksgiving
"In everything give thanks" is an admonition of my faith that often
confounds me. Reading the news of the world even as I anticipate a national day
of Thanksgiving juxtaposes the overwhelming need of the world with a surreal
celebration of abundance. Unemployment is still high. Giving to charity is at its
lowest in many sectors. Wars and rumors of wars terrorize so many, and it is a
wonder that it is even possible to give thanks for anything. Yet, to hear
others giving thanks—particularly from those who struggle in circumstances
where I would be stretched to find any reason for praise—always lends itself to
beauty and indicates a gratefulness that transcends material bounty and
benefit.
For those who lived in ancient Israel,
the concept of thanksgiving was explicitly tied to memory. The praises of Israel recalled
a history in which God was intimately involved. Indeed, the exhortation to
remember the God who brought them out of the land of Egypt
was a frequent refrain. The ancient poets and prophets extended the invitation
to remember the days of old when the Lord came near to the people even in a
desert land, and in the howling waste of a wilderness. They remembered a God
who "encircled them, cared for them, and guarded them as the pupil of his
eye." The psalmists reminded the people to "remember that God was
their rock, and the Most High God their Redeemer," and Job cried out in defiant
praise after suffering horrific loss, "The Lord gave and the Lord has
taken away. Blessed be the name of the Lord." Deuteronomy
5:15; 32:7-12, Psalm 78:35, and Job 1:21.
I read in Acts 2:42-47, Philippians 4:6,
Revelation 7:12 that a spirit of thanksgiving marked the earliest followers
of Jesus as well. These early believers seemed so overjoyed at the Spirit's
work among them that they shared meals, their property and possessions, and
were continually praising God. Paul exhorted the Philippian Christians to offer
their prayers and supplications "with thanksgiving," and the endless
song around the throne of heaven in Revelation sounds the chorus for
"blessing and glory and wisdom and thanksgiving and honor and power and
might be to our God forever and ever." Indeed, the apostle Paul insists
that giving thanks in everything is the will of God and the biblical witnesses
seem to affirm his insistence.
To have a national day of thanksgiving (of which the United States is far from alone), I believe it
calls its residents to pay particular attention to offering thanks. And while I
am grateful for a day set apart to focus on thanksgiving and a worldview that
provides me with one to thank, I am challenged to live into giving thanks in
everything every day of the year. At times, I’ve experienced thanksgiving not
always coming easily. Yet when I give thanks for the faithfulness of God there
is no room for jealousy over what others have; no room for complaining about
what I lack.
Even in times of deepest sorrow, there is a joy that rises up within the heart
to praise even
with tears. I’m thankful to say that, at times, thanksgiving has filled my heart
full of gladness, which overflows and spills out into acts of kindness and
generosity for others. When I am grateful, I cannot help but share my gratitude.
And I know this sharing is the will of God for my life. May this continue to be
so for the remainder of my Thanksgivings!
As the author of the letter to the Hebrews sums up: "Through God
then, let us continually offer up a sacrifice of praise to God that is the
fruit of lips that give thanks to his name. And do not neglect doing good and
sharing; for with such sacrifices God is pleased." Hebrews 13:15-16.
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