Deuteronomy 8:1-20 · Do Not Forget the Lord
Catching The Thanksgiving Spirit
Deuteronomy 8:1-20
Sermon
by King Duncan
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For some people, Thanksgiving is just another occassion for feasting and football. As someone has said, "If God had meant for us to fast on Thanksgiving, he would never have created 30-pound turkeys."

I believe it was Erma Bombeck who said that the most remarkable thing about her mother is that for thirty years she served the family nothing but leftovers. The original meal has never been found. Some of us will feel that way after Thanksgiving.

Robert Orben reports on the practice of raising your own holiday turkey. He says some people are squeamish about this, but not him. "One January we bought a turkey who became like a member of the family," says Orben. "We kept him in the house, fed him, and took him for walks. But when the time came, there was no nonsense about it. We had him for Christmas dinner. He sat on my right." (1)

Let me give you a little Thanksgiving trivia quiz:

Which fruit is responsible for preventing the Pilgrims from starving during their first winter in America?

The answer is the pumpkin. The words of a Pilgrim song highlight the Pilgrims' appreciation for the pumpkin's aid in staving off hunger: "We have pumpkin at morning, and pumpkin at noon. If it were not for pumpkin, we would be undoon." Those early immigrants to this land did not have it easy.

John Palmer a pastor in Live Oak, Florida tells about the first Thanksgiving he and his new bride spent together. It was rather sparse. He was still in college and his wife was working part time. There would be no traditional Thanksgiving feast for them that year...until Palmer heard a radio ad. "Test drive a new Buick and we'll give you a free turkey for Thanksgiving!" the announcer said.

The young Palmers drove excitedly downtown, kicked a few tires and test-drove a car that looked like one they could realistically afford. They spent a couple hours discussing payments, interest rates, etc. They finally told the salesman, "We need to go home and discuss it."

As they came to the door of the showroom, Palmer said in such a way as to appear as an afterthought, "What about the turkey mentioned in the commercial?"

The salesman's eyes twinkled. He motioned for them to follow. They went outside, around back, to a shed on the rear of the property. He opened the door with a flourish as he said, "If you can catch one, you can have him!"

Inside were ten full-grown live turkeys! Palmer does not say what he did at this point. Maybe he and his bride had a turkey for thanksgiving. Maybe the turkey sat on the right.

BUT IT MADE ME THINK THAT THANKSGIVING IS REALLY SOMETHING THAT HAS TO BE CAUGHT. Most people will celebrate this day without giving a moment's thought to its significance.

In the comic HI AND LOIS, the son asks, as they have gathered around the Thanksgiving table, "Why do we always have turkey on Thanksgiving?"

Lois hesitantly answers, "Well....because it's a tradition."

The son asks: "What's a tradition?"

His brother interrupts to say, "Something we've been doing so long we can't even remember why."

That's the danger isn't it? That we will forget what Thanksgiving is all about.

And yet I'm reminded of a church Thanksgiving party I heard about several years ago. The evening ended with a fellowship circle and each participant was asked to say what he or she was especially thankful for.

Many of the usual blessings were mentioned, but a small, timid, pale-faced young girl said, "Oh, I'm just thankful that I am thankful." (2)

That seems like a particularly healthy emotion to me. We ought to be thankful that we are thankful.

FOR ONE THING, WHEN WE ARE THANKFUL WE ARE AWARE OF OUR DEBTS.

Years ago the English poet, Laurence Binyon, wrote about the dead of World War I.

"They shall not grow old, as we that are left grow old;

Age shall not weary them, nor the years condemn.

At the going down of the sun and in the morning,

We will remember them."

A country that forgets its history doesn't deserve a future. A lot of people have made sacrifices so that we can have this free and prosperous land. I'm not talking just about soldiers but about parents and grandparents. I'm talking about farmers and factory workers and coal-miners. I'm talking about people who worked hard all their lives without much to show for it except the dream that some day their children would live much better.

Ross Perot tells about the day Mort Myerson became the president of Electronic Data Systems. Mort's 95-year-old grandfather was there. Mort's grandfather was forced to flee Russia many years ago because he happened to be a Jew. He lived in an attic in Brooklyn for 18 months working as a tailor, so he could get together enough money to buy a train ticket to Fort Worth, Texas. He reared a fine young son there and that son became Mort Myerson's father. And now granddad was there to see Mort become president of a major corporation. At the end of the meeting Mort's grandfather came forward with tears in his eyes and hugged Mort and said, "Son, through you I have fulfilled all of the dreams I had as a young man when I came to America." (3)

That's the kind of debt many of us owe this day. It is a debt that is owed to men and women whose names we don't even know ” but they worked and they worshipped and in some cases they even gave their lives that we might have the many benefits we will celebrate this day. When we are thankful we acknowledge that we are in debt.

WHEN WE ARE THANKFUL WE ALSO ACKNOWLEDGE THAT WE HAVE RESPONSIBILITIES. Those responsibilities are not to our ancestors but to our descendants. There is an old Amish saying that goes like this: "We didn't inherit the land from our fathers, we are borrowing it from our children." Carl Sagan, in commenting on the work of the Voyager spacecraft, put it this way, "We have not found even a trace of life. Voyager reminds us of the rarity and preciousness of life on Earth and our responsibility to preserve it." You and I have been given an amazing gift ” a beautiful land, a prosperous land, a free land. Nothing we have done could have earned this privilege for us. Will our children and our grandchildren be able to say the same?

Thanksgiving would be a good time to consider the kind of country our earliest ancestors found when they stepped forth on this continent. It was a land of pristine mountains and pure lakes where all manner of animals roamed in abundance ” three and one-half million miles of splendor from "sea to shining sea." Today we have asphalt in place of animals, while skyscrapers shield the splendor. What kind of America will our grandchildren find? It won't be the land our ancestors found.

The abuse of mother earth is nothing new, of course. King Solomon sent work crews to cut the cedars of Lebanon to build the Temple, and a palace and grand buildings in Jerusalem. The denuded slopes of the mountains washed down and polluted the land and waters below. Today there are only a dozen of the cedars of Lebanon left. An iron fence has been built around them to preserve them from tourists, in a kind of museum.

Four hundred years later, Plato warned the Greek people to stop cutting the trees. They went on cutting and cutting to make boats for commerce and war. Today the area is one of the most environmentally damaged and stressed parts of the world. (4) Environmental battles are nothing new. And some people get very emotional when the debate centers on environment vs. jobs. But is that a choice that must be made? Can we not find ways to have both?

Nature provides such a delicate balance. Somewhere I read about the Kaibab Plateau, an enormous wilderness in northern Arizona. It once supported a reasonably large deer population and a goodly number of predators, all in healthy balance with the environment. But the public, especially hunters, wanted more deer and felt that this could be accomplished by killing the deer's natural enemies. So, a systematic program of slaughter was initiated. From 1907 to 1923, 11 wolves, 600 cougars, and 3000 coyotes were removed from the Plateau. Before this, the deer population had been about 4000 healthy individuals, their numbers kept in check by the predators. With this check removed, the deer population increased spectacularly, to about 100,000.

But signs of distress started appearing quite rapidly. There was serious overbrowsing and all vegetation was stripped bare up to a height of about eight feet, the maximum that a starving deer can reach, standing on its hind legs. A great famine began in 1925 and more than half the deer starved to death in the next two years. By 1940, starvation was still killing more deer than the predators ever had, and the population was down to about 10,000. Overpopulation of deer is a continuing problem to this day. (5) Nature provides such a delicate balance. We need to help it maintain that balance.

Sure there are extremists on both sides of important evironmental questions, but Thanksgiving is a good time for us to reflect on our stewardship of this land and our responsibilities to those who come after us. When we are thankful, we acknowledge both our debts and our responsibilities.

FINALLY, WHEN WE ARE THANKFUL WE AFFIRM OUR FAITH IN GOD. Wouldn't it be awful to have all the bountiful blessings that you and I enjoy and have no one to thank? Thanksgiving is no holiday for atheists.

Hal Olsen, veteran missionary from Kenya, told of a doctor who had come to the field to use his skills to relieve suffering and pain. On one occasion he performed a delicate operation that saved a woman's life. As the patient recovered, she didn't express even one word of appreciation, and the doctor was hurt. Olsen said, "One of the first lessons a new missionary must learn is that the people to whom he's been called aren't waiting with open arms to applaud his coming. Some tribal languages have no words to express the idea of `thank you.'" Imagine that: no word by which to say thanks. How sad.

Most of us have a need to say thank you. Most especially are we thankful at Thanksgiving for our freedom. Nikita Kruschev, when Premier of the then powerful Soviet Union, roared defiantly at the citizens of the free world, "We will bury you!" I understand that Nikita Kruschev's son was recently granted citizenship in the United States. We are a blessed people. That is why we heed the words of the writer of Deuteronomy this day: "...and you shall bless the Lord your God for the good land he has given you." (RSV)

I don't know about you, but I'm thankful to be thankful. And I'm thankful that you are thankful. When we are truly thankful, we remember our debts to those who have gone before us; we remember our responsibilities to those who come after us; and most importantly, we affirm our faith in God who has given us every good thing.


1. Contributed by Bill Mosley, Llano, TX.

2. CLERGY TALK, November 1990, p. 11.

3. VITAL SPEECHES OF THE DAY.

4. Vern Rossman, Enid, OK.

5. Source unknown.

6. ILLUSAURUS.

Dynamic Preaching, Collected Sermons, by King Duncan