By Joe Chesser
Thanksgiving is a great
holiday. It’s
a time when families can get together to do things
families should be doing: eating together, laughing and
telling stories you’ve heard a hundred times, watching
the Lions and Cowboys lose, playing games, and then
eating some more. You
cook and clean and travel. You
get too full, too tired and extend yourself too much,
but it’s all worth it. It’s Thanksgiving. That’s
what people do at Thanksgiving. At
least it’s a part of it.
But
let’s back up for just a moment. Let’s
not forget that the reason we have so much food and fun
on Thanksgiving is because we have been so richly
blessed by God. We have been
blessed to live in a nation that allows us the religious
freedom to have a holiday called Thanksgiving. We
have been blessed with the financial resources to travel
and to feast. We
have been blessed with people in our past who have
taught us about God and how He loves to give to us. We
have been blessed with people, both past and present,
who take seriously the need to protect our freedoms.
So,
perhaps this Thanksgiving we can take advantage of time
off from work and time with family and friends to set
aside a special time to truly give thanks to God for the
countless ways He has blessed us. Our God
is a God who
gives. Giving
is a part of what makes Him God. Everything
we have has come from God because He owns it all. “The
earth is the Lord’s and everything in it” (Psalm 24:1).
“Every
good and perfect gift is from above, coming down from
the Father …” (James
1:17). If
you have turkey and dressing for Thanksgiving dinner
it’s because God has given you the turkey and dressing. If
you spend time with friends and family on Thanksgiving
it’s because God has given you the time, the people, and
the means to get together. If
you get some great bargains at the stores next week,
thank God for those bargains. When
it comes to thanking God, nothing is too trivial, even
the peas and carrots. It
has all come from Him, and we all need to give thanks to
Him for it. When
we do, we are blessed even more.
When
it comes to thanksgiving, there are two parts. The
first is to recognize that it is God who has given us
what we have. Our
hearts respond with gratitude because our heads know the
source of our blessings. We
know the love that gave them, and we appreciate what He
has done for us. But
thanksgiving involves more than just knowing and
appreciating, it requires a tangible response. We
give to God praise and thanks for what He has given us. We
can speak it, sing it or pray it alone or with others. Certainly
we are to live a life of thanksgiving. But
there’s no thanksgiving without the giving.
“Give
thanks to the Lord, for he is good” (Ps. 118:1).
- Joe Chesser preaches for the Fruitland church of Christ,
Fruitland, MO. He may be contacted through the congregation's
website: http://www.cofcfruitland.com/
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