Thoughts for Thanksgiving

As we near Thanksgiving, many people will be discussing the history of this holiday and the ways our celebrations have altered through the years. Whether you observe a traditional meal with family, spend the day serving others, watch football with friends, or work in an essential job, we as believers do not actually require a specific setting to celebrate and give thanks. We remember Paul’s encouragement from 1 Thessalonians 5, “In everything, give thanks.”

What are some circumstances in which we can especially celebrate and give thanks for the goodness of God?

We should give thanks each time we worship. One of our most joyful callings as Christians is to worship. When we look at the pages of Scripture, we see not only accounts of worship among God’s people, but we even can read the words which have been said/sung in worship for millennia. During the challenges of COVID, we saw the renewed importance of public worship with the gathered church, and we must also have hearts filled with praise and devotion each day. As God’s people, we need to be so attuned with worship that when we miss it, we truly miss it. We give thanks for the freedom we have to worship, and we should give thanks to God that He desires our praise and blesses with us the truth and spirit to guide our interactions with Him.

In addition to worship, we should give thanks for every opportunity to serve others. While we exalt the Lord in our praises, we are likewise called to turned our gratitude into a drive to carry the love of Christ into the world. Each day, we are given opportunities to celebrate being the hands and feet of Jesus to a world besieged by conflicts and hardships. Our prayer ought to be, “Thank You, Lord, for Your gifts and grace to me. Open my eyes to the needs of others, and make me a servant.” Scripture gushes with both commands and examples regarding the church’s call to serve (James 1:27; Mt 23:11; Rom 12:1; John 13). It is the goal of a disciple to imitate the master. As Christ demonstrated, we should not seek to be served, but to serve and to offer our lives for others (Mt 20:28).

Worship and service ought to be a constant in our approach to discipleship, but we should greatly celebrate each time we see a person come to Christ. The earliest conversions to Christ always brought rejoicing (Acts 2:40-47; 8:39; 16:34). We should never get tired of telling the story of Jesus and witnessing the good news change lives. We must avoid “elder brother syndrome” (Luke 15) and “early riser syndrome” (Mt 20:1-16). We cannot allow longer lives of faithfulness to become a platform to judge others who have taken a different path, but instead our lives are to be a venue of rejoicing when the lost are found and gathered home to the Father.

I am thankful for you as a reader, and I am grateful that we have an opportunity to celebrate the goodness of God together as we meet in this space from time to time. We are a blessed people, and through our engagement with one another, we learn, grow, and are able to draw closer to unity based in Christ.

The Christian life is not meant to be a sour, negative, gripe-filled experience.

We give thanks for our blessings past, and we long to be strengthened as we continue our journey of faith.