Teresa’s Note: November 17, 2023

*|MC:SUBJECT|*

Dear friends and members of University UMC:


I’ll never forget the first Thanksgiving I spent away from my family. I was in my 3rd year of college and I spent the Fall Semester in London. During the Thanksgiving holiday a four-day trip was coordinated for American students living in London. A few of my friends and I signed up right away. The trip began with a bus ride to the coast of England, and late that evening, we boarded a ship that took us to Amsterdam. We would see where Anne Frank hid with her family, the house where artist Vincent Van Gough lived, and we’d take a day trip to Belgium. To say the least we were excited about the trip. And I suspect somewhere inside, we sensed the trip would distract us from the fact that we were missing Thanksgiving back home.


We awakened the next day only to find that those planning the trip had surprised us with a traditional Thanksgiving Day Dinner. At the table, we were served dinner plates filled with food. And it was all wrong. You could see the faces of American college kids turning up their noses all around the room. The turkey was cold and looked more like deli meat. The cranberry sauce was served piping hot. Everything was just plain wrong. Our idea of trying to avoid thinking of home didn’t work. Instead, it made us even more homesick. We spent the entire meal sharing with one another about our favorite holiday dishes, and talking about recipes handed down through the generations.


Food can tell you a lot about where someone comes from. We assume we all sit down to the same meal at Thanksgiving, but there are so many variations. We might think everyone has pumpkin pie at Thanksgiving, but if you live in the Deep South, it’s more likely to be sweet potato pie. Dressings and stuffings vary from region to region, along with many other sides and food traditions–not to mention the friendly debate over cranberry chutney vs. relish vs. the congealed sauce we find in a can.

For many of us, it isn’t until we are in a strange land that we take time to remember where we came from. It was true for my friends and I, spending Thanksgiving overseas all those years ago. When our native language was not the language of the people around us, when the customs and traditions of the land were not our own, when the food seemed completely different from grandma’s good home cooking - it was then in the foreign place that we longed for home. Around that Thanksgiving dinner years ago, my friends and I shared stories about our family and took turns talking about our favorite home-cooked sides and desserts. We took time to remember what it feels like to be at home. And we gave thanks.


The scriptures are full of calls to remember because God knows there is a deep connection between memory and giving thanks. At any given moment, we may feel as if we are at home, or we may feel homesick. We may feel spiritually, as if we are in a foreign land, or we may be longing to return home. Wherever you find yourself this season, may we give thanks for the God who leads us through our wilderness days. May we give thanks to the God who provides for us a spiritual home.


Below are a few table blessings, as well as a prayer for Thanksgiving written by Diana Butler Bass that we'll use in our Sunday morning worship. I pray as you observe Thanksgiving in the days ahead, you will be surrounded by the company of those who love you best. This season, I give thanks for the gift of University UMC and the ways you are home for a great many people.


What a joy to be your pastor!

Teresa

We Eat and Drink


We eat and drink these fruits of earth that love may grow

between us all, between us all.

We join God’s holy cause and share our bread

with all the poor of Earth, the poor of Earth.

To God whom many faiths adore

be praises now and ever more, and ever more.

We eat and drink these fruits of earth that love may grow

between us all, between us all.

We join God’s holy cause and share our bread

with all the poor of Earth, the poor of Earth.

To God whom many faiths adore

be praises now and ever more, and ever more.

– William Livingstone Wallace

Prayer of Thanksgiving


Living Christ, thank you for this meal that nourishes our bodies and spirits.

By feasting on this bread of life, your presence reminds us of our belovedness, even when broken. For you, Holy Mystery, companion us through all things.

Thanks be for your sustaining love. Amen.

- Molly Bolton

Giving Thanks


For food in a world where many walk in hunger;

For faith in a world where many walk in fear;

For friends in a world where many walk alone;

We give you thanks, O Lord.

- Author Unknown

A Thanksgiving Day Prayer


God, there are days we do not feel grateful. When we are anxious or angry. When we feel alone. When we see and know injustice. When we do not understand what is happening in the world, or with our neighbors.


We struggle to feel grateful.


But this Thanksgiving, we choose gratitude. We choose to accept life as a gift from you, from the unfolding work of all creation. We choose to be grateful for the earth from which our food comes; for the water that sustains us; and for the air we breathe.


We choose to see our ancestors, those who came before us, and their stories, as a continuing gift of wisdom for us today. We choose to see our families and friends with new eyes, appreciating them for who they are, thankful for our homes whether humble or grand. We will be grateful for our neighbors and strive to love them as we love ourselves. We choose to see the whole planet as our shared commons, the stage of the future of humankind and creation.


God, this Thanksgiving, we do not give thanks. We choose it.


We will make thanks with courageous hearts. When we see your sacred generosity, we become aware that we live in an infinite circle of gratitude. We all are guests at a hospitable table around which gifts are passed and received. We will not let anything opposed to love take over this table. Instead, we choose to open our eyes to see grace and the gifts of life everywhere. In this choosing, we will share gratitude in the world.


Thus, with you, and with all those gathered here, we pledge to make thanks.


We ask you to strengthen us in this resolve. Here, now, and into the future. Around this table. Around the table of our nation. Around the table of the earth.


Amen.

- Diana Butler Bass

Previous
Previous

Econnection: November 23, 2023

Next
Next

Econnection: November 16, 2023