From deep troubles come deep thanks
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JOSEPH N. BELL
We will have -- I am told as I write this -- 25 people, give or take
a few, for Thanksgiving dinner this year, thus paying homage to the
concepts of extended family and traditional Thanksgiving.
Tradition works in two directions. It gives us warmth, strength,
structure, certainty, and a sense of identity that helps us remain
steadfast through difficult times.
The last Thursday in November is always going to be Thanksgiving
Day, whatever else may be happening to us. But it carries a downside,
too. Because of all those virtues, tradition doesn’t welcome any
fresh looks. Whatever worked for Grandma can certainly work for us is
the message, and we tinker with that system at our peril.
I don’t like turkey very well, for example, and I find the
prospect of two weeks of turkey leftovers deeply depressing. Still, I
would never suggest a prime rib as the main fare on Thanksgiving. And
so we will have turkey today as the rules require.
What the rules don’t explain to us is that we can manage quite
nicely on tradition alone at Thanksgiving when things are going well.
But when the world is as troubled as it is today, and God seems to be
off tending to other matters, we look a lot more wistfully for
comfort to the people who grace our table on Thanksgiving Day.
Although they are also very much a part of our tradition, they
can’t be type cast as rigidly as the Thanksgiving turkey or Grandma’s
cranberry sauce. They not only share our human problems, but perhaps
come to our table seeking the same comfort we do and are thankful --
as we are -- that they have a place that isn’t threatening, a place
where they can feel the balm of love applied to their concerns.
So maybe a special measure of sensitivity and energy is called for
this year to bridge the distance between the traditional way we
define the friends and family around our table and the people they
have become since that defining was done. We will still reminisce and
tell family jokes and describe adventures at work and sneak a look at
the football games on TV and perhaps throw a football around
ourselves.
But while we’re doing the dishes or walking off the pumpkin pie or
taking down tables or idling with a glass of wine, we might be moved
to open new conversational doors that help us reach beyond the
platitudes to get better acquainted with our family and friends. We
may find that the old baggage by which we defined these people was
never accurate or is long gone, and such fresh insights could send us
all home with a special feeling of thanksgiving.
This year reminds me of other times when we were collectively in
deep trouble, and Thanksgiving seemed a kind of irony. That was
especially true during the Great Depression when drought and disease
and poverty and hunger were the order of the day. Thanksgiving
dinners for those who could afford them were spare, but families
still collected to share resources and brace spirits. We helped one
another during those years, often giving of what little we had to
strangers whose needs were greater than ours. So in an odd sort of
way, the spirit of thanksgiving grew along with the trouble we were
all sharing.
I don’t have a great sense of that taking place today. Perhaps the
wealth of a few is obscuring the poverty of many. Perhaps the
relentless good news being fed to us is obscuring the realities of
war. Perhaps we have to reach a greater sense of urgency before the
thanksgiving spirit of the Great Depression kicks in. Meanwhile, we
have the people around our festive table today offering a bridge to
that spirit. A bridge, by the way, that we don’t have to wait for
Thanksgiving to cross.
Both the Pilgrims, who celebrated the first Thanksgiving, and
President Abraham Lincoln, who made it a national holiday, were
looking at pretty bleak pictures at the time. Lincoln was trying to
bring a fratricidal war to an end amid growing daily casualty lists
when he set a day of national thanksgiving after two pivotal Union
military victories. The Pilgrims, two years after they shared a
famous autumn harvest feast with the Wampanoag Indians, celebrated
the first formal Day of Thanksgiving when -- in answer to their
fervent prayers -- a supply ship they thought was sunk arrived on the
same day as a rainfall that broke a drought and saved their crops.
We pray today for our hypothetical ship to come in bearing peace
and prosperity for our children and grandchildren. We will have four
generations eating turkey together, and if the big view before us
inspires something less than gratitude, that is all the more reason
to look around our dining table and give thanks that we have a family
and good friends to fill that void, the resources to put this
sumptuous feast on the table, and the health and strength to enjoy
it.
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a resident of Santa Ana Heights. His column
appears Thursdays.
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