22 November 2023 St. Athanasius Lutheran
Church
Eve of National Thanksgiving Vienna, VA
“Thanksgiving in Changing Times”
Text: Deuteronomy 8:1-10; Luke
17:11-19; Philippians 4:6-20
Come, ye thankful people come; Raise the song of
harvest home.
All be safely gathered
in Ere the winter storms begin (LSB #892 v. 1).
Sing to the Lord of harvest (LSB #893 v. 1).
Singing those words sounds a bit quaint, doesn’t
it? Old fashioned. Anachronistic. Thanksgiving isn’t
really about the harvest anymore, though it may have started that way. But most
of us don’t grow our own food anymore, or if we do, it’s just a hobby, a little
garden in the backyard. Most of our food is grown either by big corporate
farms, or shipped in from some far away country. The danger of drought is
overcome by irrigation, of pests by insecticide, and of waste by refrigeration
or preservatives. Our food supply - here in the United States at least - is so
stable we take it for granted. The last time we couldn’t get what we wanted in
the grocery store wasn’t a weather problem or a harvest problem,
but a supply chain problem during covid. Harvesting
is something we think very little about. And so the God who sends the rain and
the sun and causes crops to grow and produce, often gets little thought or
thanks as well.
Small farms that are still around know, though,
how precarious things are. Too little rain or too much rain, or rain at the
wrong time, or scorching sun or oppressive temperatures, or disease or an
infestation of pests can wreak havoc and wipe out a year’s work. To them, a
good harvest is still a big deal. And a cause to give thanks.
Five hundred years ago, Luther was concerned
about this very thing - of what our world has become. During his day, society
was beginning to change from a mostly agrarian society and economy to a more monied economy. Luther saw this as man becoming
disconnected from the fertile soil and the small human community, and
more connected to trade, sterile money, and what has become a global
economy. Not that these things are bad in and of themselves, but he saw in them
the potential or what we see has happened today - a distancing and increasing
gap between God and man. Between the God who provides and man who receives.
Think about the vastly different images of God
from a farmer who is dependent on rain and sun, in the right amounts and at the
right time - something he can do nothing about but pray - and our virtual,
internet, information age, where God is not the provider, Amazon is. God is not
omniscient, Google is. God is not omnipotent, the social media provider who can
take down your post is. Food is ordered and just shows up at your door, and
earning a living is no longer by working the soil but by becoming a influencer. So, accordingly, Thanksgiving has changed. It
has become turkey day, family day. Fortunately, the word thanks is still
in the name of the holiday, so we haven’t lost it altogether! But times have
changed, haven’t they?
We really shouldn’t need a day to remind us to give
thanks. We should be thanking God every day, as the Catechism teaches us: that
in response to all that God provides for us every day, it is my duty to
thank and praise, serve and obey Him. Though I will confess I do not do
this. I do not thank God for all His gifts. I take them for granted. So it’s
good to have a day we should not need, like this! To not only remind me to give
thanks, but to repent of my failure to do so.
But this is a problem that far predates Luther
and his concerns. We heard in Deuteronomy Moses reminding the people
that when they get into the Promised Land not to forget the God who took care
of them and provided for them the past 40 years. That when
they eat and are full, they shall bless the Lord your God.
That is, acknowledge Him as the Giver and give thanks to Him. We heard this
also in the Holy Gospel. I’m quite sure all ten lepers were thankful for
their healing, yet only one returned to Jesus to give Him thanks. Only one saw
in Jesus God in the flesh - God providing for the salvation of His
people here in this man, in human flesh and blood.
Flesh and blood that are
here for us, too, tonight, in the Supper that is sometimes called the Eucharist
- which means, the giving thanks. On the night when He was betrayed, Jesus took
bread, and when He had given thanks . . . Maybe we sometimes gloss over
those words. Because, well, Body and Blood! Forgiveness, life, and
salvation! But as Jesus received and gave thanks, so we, too, receive and
give thanks. Thanks to our Father who not only provided bread and wine, but has
preserved our lives for another year, has enabled us to be here - not all can,
or will, and who here gives us far more than earthly food and drink, but - as
the early church liked to call it - the medicine of immortality. Certainly,
what we receive here is of primary importance! But it causes a response,
too. Of thanksgiving.
And thanksgiving not only
in words, but in deeds. Paul praises the Philippian Christians for this, for their
care and generosity toward him. That in response to all that
God had so generously given them, they did the same toward others. Bringing both them and Paul joy. And in a world where there
seems to be very little joy, maybe this is what’s missing. That the joy we need
we will find when we return to lives of thanksgiving, to the Giver of every
good gift. Thanksgiving that leads not only to joy, but also to peace.
Maybe that’s a little harder in our world that’s
becoming more and more virtual, scientific, and global, and less and less
earthy and local. But not impossible. We just need to
remember where everything comes from - really! - and
know that if He didn’t give it, we wouldn’t have it. That truth
seems a bit quaint, old fashioned, and anachronistic! For we’re
used to getting and taking for ourselves. Of fully-stocked grocery store
shelves and Amazon that has multiples of everything and now Artificial
Intelligence that can figure out what even Google does not know! But take that
away . . . have a drought or plague affect the internet . . . prevent the
online harvest of everything that we’re used to . . . and see how God enters
the picture again. I pray it not come to that, but maybe it would be a
blessing. If people turned back, if there was repentance instead of pride, if
we once again realized that were it not for Jesus and Him crucified, our sin
would long ago have destroyed us and our world. It has not, because Jesus had
it destroy Him instead. And then rose that there be life again. Life for us,
and all that we need to support this life, both physical and spiritual. All from Him. From His gracious hand, His
pierced side, and His powerful Word.
So that we can, as we will sing at the end
of the service, now thank we all our God, with hearts and hands and
voices . . . for His countless gifts of love, which still are ours today (LSB #895 v. 1). And
not just today, but everyday. Maybe a new habit. And with it, a little
more joy and peace.
In the Name of the Father, and of the (+) Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.