FOR CATHOLICS, THANKSGIVING IS PERPETUAL
Saint Cecilia Catholic Community
Thanksgiving Day
November 23, 2017 10:30 AM
Rev. David Justin Lynch
Sirach 50:22-24 Psalm 45:2-11
I Corinthians 1:3-9 Luke 17:11-19
+ In the name of
the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit, AMEN.
Secular
authority in our country designated today to give thanks, to show our gratitude
for all the blessings of life. For most people, that includes family, friends,
and perhaps economic success. Those prone to American Exceptionalism give
thanks for living in the United States rather than elsewhere. Christians,
however, give thanks to God, first and foremost, for the simple gift of life
itself, rather than gloat over whatever good fortunes life has brought us.
Common folklore
tells us that the first thanksgiving was celebrated by the Pilgrims, who were
anti-Catholic refugees from the Church of England, in Massachusetts in about the
year 1621. However, it actually started earlier, and it was originated by
Catholics, not protestants. On April thirty, in the year 1598, in Texas, Don
Juan de OƱate declared a day of Thanksgiving, commemorated by a Mass.
How appropriate that was! Because when we Christians
celebrate the Eucharist, we give thanks! The very word “Eucharist” comes from a
Greek word that means giving thanks, or showing gratitude. Giving thanks is at
the heart of the Mass. The Eucharistic
Prayer is often called “The Great Thanksgiving.” The preface dialogue between
the presider and assembly has the presider saying, or preferably, singing, “Let
us give thanks to the Lord our God,” to which the assembly responds, “It is
right to give Him thanks and praise.” The presider then continues, “It is right
and just, our duty and our salvation, always and everywhere, to give you
thanks…” The preface concludes with an invitation to join the whole company of
heaven in praising God, because when we praise God, we thank God. It’s so natural for us to say, thank you God,
for everything you’ve done for us, and for that, we praise you.
But the
Eucharistic Prayer is not the only part of the Mass where we give thanks. After
the first and second readings, the reader ends with, “the word of the Lord,” to
which we respond, “thanks be to God.” After communion is distributed and the
Altar cleared, we sing or say a prayer after communion, thanking God for the
gift of His Son in the sacrament. In fact, in the traditional Anglican rite, there
is an unchanging post-communion prayer that begins, “Almighty and everliving
God, we thank you for feeding us,” or other words to that effect. And when the Mass ends, the deacon or
presider sings or says, “Go in peace” or in Lent, “Let us bless the Lord, to
which the response is, “Thanks be to God.”
For Catholic
Christians, the Eucharist is “the source and summit of Christian life,”
according to Paragraph 11 in the Vatican II document known as “Lumen Gentium.”
Given derivation of the word Eucharist, we can accurately say that gratitude,
being thankful to God for who we are, where we are, and what we are, is at the
center of what it really means to be a Christian. Despite whatever other
troubles we may have in our lives, be it illness, poverty, natural disasters,
or any other kind of distress or suffering, being Christian means giving thanks
for the things in our life, few as they may be, that are going well for
us. That is why, despite the fact that
Thanksgiving Day is not a traditional liturgical feast on the church calendar,
Mass on Thanksgiving Day is most appropriate and will always be celebrated here
at Saint Cecilia Catholic Community.
We Catholic Christians
are people known for giving thanks because we do it so much. For us, giving
thanks is an ingrained habit not confined to one day a year. It is something we
do all the time, every time we celebrate the Eucharist. Thanksgiving Day, and
indeed every day, should be a time when we give thanks to Jesus for celebrating
first Eucharist at the Last Supper. Indeed, the very words spoken by Jesus
Himself, recall for us that he blessed the bread and blessed the wine, “when he
had given thanks.”
The centrality of the Eucharist to Christian life is where
the rubber meets the road in distinguishing catholic Christians from those of
other Christian persuasions. I seriously
doubt the pilgrims had anything resembling a Mass at their thanksgiving, simply
because they did not have an ordained priest among them. Moreover, part of
their program was getting rid of bishops and dissing the Apostolic Succession,
and their church services did not include Holy Communion every Sunday; in fact
they were known to have it only four times a year, or less, and for them, communions
was a mere memorial, not a manifestation of the actual, real, physical presence
of Jesus in the form of bread and wine.
Our secular sisters and brothers will celebrate Thanksgiving
Day to honor the joys of everyday life by consuming large amounts of turkey,
stuffing, potatoes, vegetables, and other delicious things, as we ourselves
will do today. But for Catholic Christians, the Eucharist, not turkey day, is, always
has been, and always will be, the true
“the source and summit of Christian Life.” Thanksgiving Day should be a day when
we thank God that the Mass is the principal act of Sunday worship every Sunday celebrated
by priests ordained in the succession of the Apostles, where we give thanks
over and over again throughout the service, for the Word of God and for the
real, actual, physical presence of Jesus among us.
But the meaning of the Mass for which we should be thankful
is not confined to receiving Jesus in Holy Communion. At the end of Mass, we
are sent out to do God’s work outside the walls of the church. That work can be
as simple as holding a door open for those carrying something, giving
directions to a lost person, or even saying hello and wishing someone a nice
day. More likely than not, those for whom we do these things will say, “Thank
you.” What an excellent way to start a conversation to invite someone to Mass
here at St. Cecilia’s! Have you heard the saying, “what goes around
comes around?” If that person shows up for Mass, thanksgiving will truly manifest
itself as an circle that starts and ends with the gift of the Body and Blood of
Jesus in the Holy Eucharist, truly the Great Thanksgiving. AMEN.
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