I
glanced at the magazines on the rack, and there she was, Martha Stewart, promising
the “Best Thanksgiving Ever.” She was offering
a perfect piece of pie while smiling a perfect smile with perfect teeth,
wearing a perfect dress with perfect hair, surrounded by a perfect kitchen with
an open window that looked out on a perfect garden. Every wrinkle and excess pound had been
photo-shopped away so that she looked decades younger than her actual age.
Unlike Martha, when we sit down to Thanksgiving dinner we show up with wrinkles, warts and all. We look our age. The kitchen is a mess with spilled flour on the cabinet and a sink full of dirty dishes. The food, of course, is great because my wife is a great cook: baked turkey, mashed potatoes, giblet gravy, her famous dressing passed down from her mother, green beans, fruit salad, cranberry sauce, pumpkin and pecan pie.
But, it occurred to me, when I saw Martha Stewarts’s magazine cover, that Thanksgiving isn’t about the food or the perfect picture. Real Thanksgiving is about the heart. It is difficult for a heart that is not thankful every day to be truly thankful on Thanksgiving Day.
Which brings up a concern about Thanksgiving. This year our tradition of gathering around bountiful tables with family and friends seems more like a brief interruption to the more important business of shopping. We can hardly push back from the table fast enough to hit the stores for Black Friday door busters that start on Thursday.
Unlike Martha, when we sit down to Thanksgiving dinner we show up with wrinkles, warts and all. We look our age. The kitchen is a mess with spilled flour on the cabinet and a sink full of dirty dishes. The food, of course, is great because my wife is a great cook: baked turkey, mashed potatoes, giblet gravy, her famous dressing passed down from her mother, green beans, fruit salad, cranberry sauce, pumpkin and pecan pie.
But, it occurred to me, when I saw Martha Stewarts’s magazine cover, that Thanksgiving isn’t about the food or the perfect picture. Real Thanksgiving is about the heart. It is difficult for a heart that is not thankful every day to be truly thankful on Thanksgiving Day.
Which brings up a concern about Thanksgiving. This year our tradition of gathering around bountiful tables with family and friends seems more like a brief interruption to the more important business of shopping. We can hardly push back from the table fast enough to hit the stores for Black Friday door busters that start on Thursday.
Apparently
the earliest “Black Fridays” took place in Philadelphia in the 1950s when
hordes of shoppers descended on local stores ahead of the Army/Navy football
game. The national push started in the 1960s. It gained momentum and became a well-fixed
tradition by the 21st century.
While most stores still remain closed on Thursday, others will throw
open their doors on Thanksgiving. Black
Friday has become a 5 day marathon including Cyber Monday.
I
am nostalgic for the traditional American Thanksgiving we knew when I was a
child. All the stores were closed. Workers could spend the day with their
families. No one had to shop for presents or send cards. All we had to do was
enjoy getting together with those we love and be thankful.
Our forefathers knew nothing of this. They hunted and harvested and cleaned and
cooked, but they never stood in lines in front of glass doors waiting for the
opening bell. They never rushed through aisles searching for treasures that
were sure to disappear. They never stood
in check-out lines that stretched to the back of the store. Black Friday seems
to symbolize our rush through life, our efforts to get the best deal, to be
first in line.
I hope this holiday season we cultivate a thankful heart and
grateful spirit and take time to truly “be” with family and friends so that
this is “the best Thanksgiving ever.” (Colossians 3:15)
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