I was reminded of something I heard on the radio a while ago: Thanksgiving is the one holiday that has not been commercialized to death. Granted, it is used as the launching pad for the largest, most tawdry commercialization of all: Christmas shopping. But the day itself has remained fairly well insulated from the marketers and still centers around home and family for most who recognize it at all. Contrary to popular myth, the tradition does not stem directly from the “First Thanksgiving” we see pictured with Pilgrims and Indians sharing their bounty. The idea of a day to give thanks was first mentioned in 1789 by President Washington, but not made an annual remembrance until President Lincoln in 1863, and not made permanent until 1941 when the US Congress made it official. (See ChristianAnswers.net)
I wonder if this one holiday has remained more or less pure because to be truly thankful requires a dose of humility. One must humble oneself to admit that a debt is owed to another. Humility’s wicked step sister, humiliation, is so ill considered that most people avoid humility as they would a coughing, red-eyed street person. It is awkward to embrace, after all; to claim to have it is to prove you do not. Imagine someone saying, “Humility is one of my greatest strengths.”
It seems to me that the three hundred million of us fortunate enough to live in America have quite a bit to be thankful for. Despite the clamor over illegal phone taps and invasive body scans, we have not had a major terrorist attack in this country since 2001. Ignore the hyperbole which denigrates our health system and you find some of the best care in the world (available even to the indigent, contrary to the reformer’s cries.) While unemployment is a serious matter and foreclosures are more frequent than usual, neither starvation nor homelessness stalk our citizens in massive numbers. People gripe about gasoline prices without realizing that much of the developed world pays many multiples more than we do. Then come the police, the firefighters, the school teachers, the highways, the water and sewer systems and more that people regularly complain about, without which life would be substantially poorer. These are all things to be thankful for.
This is not the end of the list of material blessings we enjoy, but more important than any of these to those who follow Christ is the spiritual inheritance which awaits the passing of this material frame. The Apostle Paul recommends that believers give thanks in everything to the God who is responsible for it all. Most encouraging is the knowledge that all of it, even the unpleasant parts, will ultimately redound to the good for those who love God. After the parades, the turkey and the football, remember to be grateful for the important things. Mostly, remember that the most important ones are not things at all.
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