Happy Thanksgiving, What’s for Dinner? Deut. 26: 1-11; John 6:25-35
If you know me, you know that I have very strong feelings on green bean casserole. Why would someone ruin perfectly good green beans by making them look like vomit in a casserole dish. In a world of amazing casseroles, side dishes, and appetizers, who thought this was a good idea? And who put it at Thanksgiving? That holiday, Thanksgiving, has a long history in our country. The first Thanksgiving that we typically learn about and see pictures of was in 1621 in Plymouth Colony, but the first recorded event was 1623 after a drought. George Washington was the first president to issue a Thanksgiving Proclamation in 1789, though it was only one time. In 1863, Abraham Licoln established a national Thanksgiving Day on the last Thursday in November. And finally, it became a federal holiday in 1941. Thanksgiving, thankfully, has a very bipartisan history in our government. Today, as we approach this day of thanks, we reflect on three things: God’s provision, God’s love, and giving thanks.
First in our scripture we see God’s provision. In the exchange between Jesus and his disciples, the manna from God was brought up. They ask Jesus for a sign of his authority. This was not meant to be dismissive or insulting to Jesus. It was very typical for any prophet or spiritual leader to give signs to the Hebrew people going all the way back to Moses. They say to Jesus that Moses gave them bread from heaven to eat. Jesus corrects them that Moses did not give manna. God did. In Deuteronomy the people are told to give God an offering of the first produce they harvest. This shows their trust in God’s provision, because if God doesn’t provide, there’s no offering of thanks.
In trying times, we have to trust in God’s provision for us. That can be hard. When I saw the price of coffee at the grocery store the other day, I almost said something I’d have to repent for later. Yet this season is a reminder for us to be grateful that there is food available. Many times in history, people have faced famine, hardship, and the cruelty the elements of life in this world. The early settlers gave thanks and celebrated, not because it was a national holiday, but because they literally were grateful to have enough food to survive the winter without starving to death.
There’s a beautiful promise in John, echoed in other gospels. “Don’t be so concerned about perishable things like food. Spend your energy seeking the eternal life that the Son of Man can give you.” I know that it is easy to worry a lot in our day-to-day life. I think worry is a constant human condition. But Jesus means here not to be preoccupied by this. Trusting in God’s promises is far more powerful than living life from one calamity to the next because even when life seeks to knock you down, the God of all will pick you up and bear you through.
Another excellent reminder in this scripture is God’s love for us. Jesus tells the disciples, “I am the bread of life. Whoever comes to me will never be hungry again. Whoever believes in me will never be thirsty.” An older friend of mine says sometimes life is like making chicken and dumplings. There’s a lot of easy ways to do it, but the long way from scratch is always the best. God’s love is much like that. In some aspects, it is easy to enjoy God’s love and blessings. Being loved is often easy, and we enjoy it. But living and sharing that love can be hard at times.
A friend of mine says that it’s so easy at Thanksgiving to go home hug his family, catch up, and just enjoy being in their presence. But the moment they start talking politics at Thanksgiving dinner, he realizes he’s about to save a lot of money on Christmas presents. Two of the hardest parts to our faith are trusting when we don’t see the solution and loving the way that Jesus does. In some ways it’s so hard for us to process the idea that Jesus loved Judas. Jesus loved Pilate. Jesus loved Herod. Jesus loved the pharisees. Their downfall and turmoil was not because Jesus hated them and wanted to see them suffer like a villain. It was because of they didn’t love Jesus nor want to follow him.
I think Jesus knew that two of our greatest struggles in life are trust and love. Many of us have an “I’ll do it myself” attitude. Many of us feel more comfortable walking an extra 45 minutes around the grocery store to avoid talking to that difficult person we know. But we have to trust and love because God has trusted us and loved us. God trusts us with this earth which God created. God trusts us with the people on this earth, who are made in God’s image. God loves us enough to offer us grace and redemption even when we are ugly acting, unthankful, and have the attitude of 7 day old green bean casserole. But most importantly God trusts and loves us enough to call us children, family.
A friend of mine has a tough relationship with his parents. They tend to be difficult, sometimes manipulative, and very narcissistic. Life has taught him that safety is found in separation from their toxic ways of being. He can love and pray for them without being snagged in the web of turmoil. But he has a very expansive friend network who have become family, a chosen family. That’s how God loves us. We’re not children of God because of obligation or being born into it. We are the family of God because we are chosen and loved by God.
Because of this we can give thanks. In our Deuteronomy lesson we read how the people were instructed to take a good portion of their first produce of harvest and bring it to the place of worship. They were to deliver it as an offering before the high priest in memory and honor of God’s fulfillment of God’s promises to them. Giving thanks is a bit like making chicken and dumplings as well. We can do so many ways that are cheap, quick, and easy. Or we can take our time to be truly thankful, to stay in a space of gratitude and love before God.
One of the hardest tests of faith is whether or not we can continue to be thankful and have an attitude of gratefulness even when our trust is broken and we feel like life and people have bruised us. Can we continue to be thankful and grateful when we feel unloved and abandoned? Sometimes trust and love are hard enough that thanksgiving seems impossible. But in those times, Jesus tells us, like the disciples, “The only work God wants from you: Believe in the one he sent.” Now, there are great works of faith and good behaviors we should be inspired to do FROM our faith. But faith really is as simple as belief. The rest is just how we follow and live out what we have believed.
If ever I go home for Thanksgiving and there’s green bean casserole but no sweet potato souffle, my trust will be broken, and my sense of love would be tested. In some ways, that’s a joke, but in other ways, it teaches us how fragile trust can be. And when trust is broken, it often feels like we are unloved. When we live in faith, that is never the case. God loves us unconditionally. God’s promises are trustworthy without question. Jesus says to us, “I am the bread of life. Whoever comes to me will never be hungry again. Whoever believes in me will never be thirsty.
In faith, we find all that we need to be nourished and fulfilled. This Thursday we will celebrate a day of Thanksgiving. Some folks celebrate that day. Some do a whole 30 days of Thanksgiving for the month of November. But gratefulness isn’t about one day or one month. Living a grateful life means each and every day relying on and showing forth our trust and love just as we are loved. So, Happy Thanksgiving, my friends, and may your casseroles be your favorite.
Worship Service Video https://www.facebook.com/fccmacon/videos/1554863072320705/
