Meet, right and our bounden duty
I am surprised that someone has not decided to
protest that the observance of Thanksgiving is a violation of the rights of
non-Christians. Probably someone has because it is a rare case of a distinctively
Christian virtue being made the object of a national holiday. Of course gratitude
is a natural human virtue as well as a supernatural one and it perfectly possible
for everyone, all human beings, to recognize the need to give thanks. We can in
any case we can be grateful that we have this publicly sanctioned holiday
because it raises the question ‘to whom are we bound to give thanks?’
Presumably we are at Mass today not only to give
thanks to all those to whom we are indebted but to Him to whom we ultimately
owe thanks, almighty God. Which raises another question ‘thanks for what?’
Obviously everything in the case of God but thanksgiving is not an abstract
thing but always particular and I suppose for many Anglicans it is the Prayer
of General Thanksgiving in the Prayer Book which gives the particulars:
Almighty
God, Father of all mercies,
we thine unworthy servants
do give
we thine unworthy servants
do give
most
humble and hearty thanks
for all thy goodness and loving-kindness
to us and to all men.
We bless thee for our creation, preservation,
and all the blessings of this life;
but above all for thine inestimable love
in the redemption of the world by our Lord Jesus Christ;
for the means of grace, and for the hope of glory.
for all thy goodness and loving-kindness
to us and to all men.
We bless thee for our creation, preservation,
and all the blessings of this life;
but above all for thine inestimable love
in the redemption of the world by our Lord Jesus Christ;
for the means of grace, and for the hope of glory.
Fr. Ronald Knox points out that thanksgiving is
one of the four ends of Christian prayer along with praise, confession and
intercession and among these thanksgiving takes the honorable second
place. Praise comes first because we praise God not only because he does things
for us but for who he is. Thanksgiving comes next before confession because
sinful creatures that we are creatures before we are sinners. It comes before
intercession because justice demands that we should ask God for what he has
done for us before we ask him to do more.
The difficulty is that we have a severe and
chronic case of amnesia: we are forgetful. Yet we can give thanks even for
that. St. Augustine in the Confessions prays:
Most merciful God . . . You did not forget me,
even when I forgot you. Remember Lord that you came to me even before I cried
to you.
“We lift up our hearts’ and ‘give thanks to the
Lord our God’ because he is always ahead of us, always giving us a thirst for
him, ever drawing us to him. Not that we
loved God but that he loved us.
Meet, right and our bounden duty
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