Rules
of Thanks
U.S. Thanksgiving Day (Year C)
Anticipated Evening Service, 27 November 2013--5:00 p.m. Sung Mass
U.S. Thanksgiving Day (Year C)
Anticipated Evening Service, 27 November 2013--5:00 p.m. Sung Mass
Parish
Church of Trinity, Ashland (Oregon)
Readings:
Deut. 26:1-11, Psalm 100, Phil. 4:4-9, John 6:25-35
God,
give us hearts to feel and love,
take
away our hearts of stone
and
give us hearts of flesh. Amen.
I think that gratitude is the
emotion that best connects us with God. Trust is a close
second. Both of these are in fact expressions of love. And God is,
in fact, Love Itself. Love, trust, and gratitude give us eyes to see God. At
the very least they allow us to perceive the works of the hand of
God.
There are, I think, some basic rules
of the road to feeling gratitude and expressing thanksgiving, to keep these
profound feelings from leading us astray.
There are some too for feeling or expressing gratitude’s opposites, like
resentment, disappointment, anger and regret.
Here are a few:
1)
When good happens, when beauty occurs, when grace arrives,
feel gratitude. Let yourself feel it fully. Direct it to the giver, and know that when
all is said and done, all good comes from God.
2)
When good happens, do not feel that you deserved it, earned
it, or were entitled to it. Especially do not feel this if in fact you
contributed in some part, large or small, to the arrival of the
good. Even if you made the good,
recognize that whatever skills, attributes, and abilities you used in doing
this were also gifts. Admit that all
good gifts come from God, because of God’s
goodness, not the goodness of the gift’s recipient.
3)
When good happens to other people, be sure to tell them how
much they contributed to it or made the good possible. Be lavish in praise. But be careful not to suggest that somehow
your good estimation of that person is based merely on their performance.
4)
When bad stuff happens to you, do not blame God, or feel
that it is punishment. It you are responsible in whole or in part, accept
the responsibility, but do not mistake the natural results of your actions as
malevolent or willed harm from an angry deity.
5)
When bad stuff happens to other people, do not attribute it
to some punishment by an avenging or even just God. Do not try to explain
it away, or even say you understand.
Just say how badly it makes you feel.
6)
Use gratitude and thanksgiving as a means of driving away
negative feelings. Alienation, anger, hatred, jealousy, envy, fear, disgust—all
of these feelings have a difficult time remaining in our hearts when our hearts
are full of gratitude and thanks. Make use of a gratitude list and
be sure that your prayers have at least as many as many thanksgivings as
petitions.
7)
Know that joys and thanks shared with others are multiplied,
just as sorrows and burdens shared are lightened.
Trappist monk and mystic Thomas
Merton once said this to a group of monastic novices:
“Life is this simple: We are living
in a world that is absolutely transparent
and God is shining through it all the
time. This is not just a fable or a nice story. It is true. If we abandon
ourselves to God and forget ourselves, we see it sometimes, and we see it maybe
frequently. God shows [God’s] self everywhere, in everything - in people and in
things and in nature and in events. It becomes very obvious that He is
everywhere and in everything and we cannot be without [God]. It's
impossible. It's simply impossible. The only thing is that we don't see it.”
Being open hearted, open handed, and
open-minded all depend on a sense of gratitude and thanks. When all
is said and done, so does any true faith in God.
I am so thankful for so many
things. I am grateful for my family, especially my life’s companion
Elena, and my children. I am thankful
for having been given the privilege of serving my country overseas for most of
my adult life, and for the blessing of a late-in-life call to the priesthood in
Christ’s One, Holy, and Apostolic Church.
I am thankful, so very, very thankful, to be serving this gifted and
faith-filled group of friends at this time, here, in the Rogue Valley.
I am thankful for the wonderful music here, and
for our commitment to service and justice. I am thankful for the opportunities for
education and personal development my family and I have had, and for the abundance
and liberties we enjoy here in the United States. I am thankful for health and for the natural
beauty around me here. I am thankful for
so many, many things.
I
hope that you take time during the holiday to sit back a few minutes in quiet
and reflect on what you are thankful for, what makes you bless God and love the
world.
In the name of Christ, Amen.
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