There are no rules saying any of us has to be here this morning.
I’m sure a lot of people have other things to do — trips to make, turkeys to
stuff, tables to set. Somewhere, there’s a football game waiting to be watched.
In the middle of all that, going to Mass isn’t required. This isn’t a day of
obligation. Rather, it is a day of opportunity. It’s an opportunity to think
back on what we have been given…and to give something in return: thanks.
Actually, “thanks” is too small a word. We are here to give gratitude. They
should call this day “Gratitude-giving.” We are here to honor, with grateful
hearts, what God has done for us. Very often, in our prayer lives, we spend so
much time on our knees, asking for things. Pleading. “God, help me pass this
test.” “Keep me from throttling my teenager.” “Help me find a job.” “Protect my
son in Afghanistan.” The scripture tells us to ask and we shall receive, and to
knock and it will be opened. So, we ask, and we knock. But what happens then?
In our gospel reading today, ten people are cured of leprosy. Only one comes
back to say thank you. Tellingly, the person who comes back is a Samaritan. He isn’t
Jewish. Only that one, a Samaritan, returns to give glory to God. We don’t know
what happened to the other nine. Maybe they had turkeys to stuff or football
games to watch. Implicit in this episode is the idea that something is missing.
Giving thanks is a vital and necessary part of our relationship with God! All
the lepers were cured. But only one, the one who gave thanks, was saved. And
that is because thankfulness, we discover, is a measure of faith. A measure of
our dependence on God, and of our own humility. But sometimes thankfulness can
be hard to express. Most of us know someone who is having a difficult time this
Thanksgiving. The woman who is spending her first holiday as a widow. The
father who lost his job and is worried about where he will find Christmas gifts
for his children. Those friends and neighbors who are hurting or alone. Where
are the blessings for these and others who are feeling, in a particular way,
burdened, afflicted, cursed? Those blessings are closer than we may think. Every
breath is a blessing. Every moment. “Bless the God of all,” Sirach exclaims,
“who has done wondrous things on earth.” Incredibly, we are part of that
wonder, part of God’s continuing creation in the world. And what a blessing to
be able to say that! Meister Eckhart, once wrote: “If the only prayer you ever
say in your whole life is ‘thank you,’ that will suffice.” That is why we are
here: to pray those words, and to make them matter! So, taking a cue from
Meister Eckhart, let’s make this something more than a holiday, more than an
excuse to have a second slice of pie and take a long nap in front of the
television. Make this very day a kind of prayer. Beginning here, and now! As
the day unfolds, carry that prayer with you. Live it. Give it. This is, after all,
a day for giving — giving thanks. It doesn’t have to end when you say grace
over the turkey. In fact, it doesn’t have to end tonight — God’s gifts
certainly won’t. Every beat of your heart affirms an unmistakable mystery: God
has given you life. Extravagant, wonderful, painful, tumultuous, challenging
life. Let’s strive to remind ourselves of God’s blessings, wherever we find
them, however they come to us. And to give thanks for them, every day, in every
moment. There is a beautiful tradition I recently found in a history book:
George Washington’s Thanksgiving proclamation from 1789. It includes this
beautiful sentence: “Now, therefore, I do recommend and assign THURSDAY, the
TWENTY-SIXTH DAY of NOVEMBER next, to be devoted by the people of these States to
the service of that great and glorious Being who is the beneficent author of
all the good that was, that is, or that will be.” That author’s magnificent
work – truly the greatest story ever composed – is continuing. He has made us a
part of it. And that is reason enough for us to be here, on this day of
opportunity, not obligation, to tell Him how humbled, and happy, and grateful
we are. Happy Thanksgiving • AE
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