This
Thursday is Thanksgiving in the USA.
“On
Thanksgiving Day we acknowledge our dependence.”
~
William Jennings Bryan
One
of my favorite prayers in the Book of Common Prayer is this one from the Order
for Compline:
O God, your unfailing providence sustains the
world we live in and the life we live: Watch over those, both night and day,
who work while others sleep, and grant that we may never forget that our common
life depends upon each other's toil; through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.
Book of Common Prayer, p. 134
It
is a reminder that the world in which we live, the lives we live – all that we
are and all that we have – is all the sheer gift of God. It is not something we
can seize or hold. We can only receive and give thanks. This receiving is not
passive but rather an active attentiveness to each moment as the irreplaceable,
intimate gift of God. We thank God who wonderfully created us and still more
wonderfully redeems us. It is no accident that the central practice of the
Church is the Eucharist the root meaning of which is “thanksgiving.”
The
prayer from Compline is also a reminder that we are dependent on each other’s
toil. The notion of an autonomous individual, rugged or otherwise, is a false
one. It is fundamentally absurd. We are born into, and dependent upon from
start to finish, a web of relationships. We always and only live at the hands
of others. Part of the discipline of active, attentive gratitude is giving
thanks for everyone else. Margaret Visser writes, “Gratitude is always a matter
of paying attention, of deliberately beholding and appreciating the other”
(Gratitude’s Grace Can Be Itself a Gift).
Thanksgiving
is a good reminder to pay attention to our interdependence and appreciate
others on whom we depend. So, this Thanksgiving, thank God for his unfailing
sustaining providence. And thank all those other folk on whose toil your life
depends. Thank family and friends. But also thank everyone who had a hand in
making your Thanksgiving feast possible: those who planted, those who
harvested, those who processed and packed, those who drove the trucks and those
who loaded and unloaded the trucks, those who stocked the shelves and those who
checked out the groceries. Thank the utility workers who make sure the power
gets to your home – sometimes in inclement weather. And thank sister turkey and
brother pig for the sacrifice of their lives for your enjoyment and
nourishment. And thank all who participate in one way or another in the web of
mutual dependence.
Of
course, the third Thursday of November is but a particular, public reminder of
our dependence on God and one another. We can seek an active attentive gratitude
day in and day out. One way to do that is to end each day with an adaptation of
the Jesus prayer:
Lord
Jesus Christ, Son of God, Thank you.
Lord
Jesus Christ, Son of God, Thank you.
Lord
Jesus Christ, Son of God, Thank you.
Lord
Jesus Christ, Son of God, Thank you for ____________.
Lord
Jesus Christ, Son of God, Thank you for ____________.
Lord
Jesus Christ, Son of God, Thank you for ____________.
Etc.
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