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							How do you give thanks? With song? With 
							dance? With poetry? With photography? With silence? 
							With friends?
 What do you give thanks for? Your pet? Your 
							home? Your grandkids? Your spouse? Your life?
 
 There’s much to be thankful for: good health, a home 
							filled with love, a church family who loves God, and 
							for a good book on a sunny November day. Remember 
							though, some folks may be going through a difficult 
							season and what they need isn't a lecture about this 
							or that but a listening ear.
 
 Be gentle to one another during these holy-days. Be 
							present with one another. Be kind to that uncle of 
							yours who presses your buttons because he's lonely 
							and wants the attention. Be sweet to that relative 
							who talks over everybody about all the things you 
							could care less about because they, like you, just 
							to be heard. Above all, give the gift everyone will 
							be most thankful for: yourself.
 
 Friends, during these holy-days, do take time to 
							remember those who are away from loved ones and say 
							a little prayer for them; do make an effort to 
							celebrate what is good and beautiful in our lives; 
							and above all—do all you can, while you can to show 
							much you love one another.
 
 Don't talk about the Cubs...okay maybe jut a little 
							but not to the point where your grandma who is a 
							Cardinal fan loses her dentures.
 
 Don’t sweat the small stuff—like burnt rolls and 
							undercooked sweet potatoes or the stain on your 
							tablecloth.
 
 Don’t talk politics. Just. Don't.
 
 Tell those you gather with, whether you seem them 
							every day, one a year, or you’re having Thanksgiving 
							supper at a local restaurant—how much you appreciate 
							them.
 
 
 
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							Here’s something else to consider. We’re all we got. 
							This life together is the only one we have right 
							now. Let’s do our best to celebrate one another. I love what the psalmist says in Psalm 66. 
							Particularly I love the paraphrase from Presbyterian 
							Pastor Eugene Peterson:
 
							Take a good look at God’s wonders—they’ll take your breath away.
 He converted sea to dry land;
 travelers crossed the river on foot.
 Now isn’t that cause for a song?
 …
 All believers, come here and listen,
 let me tell you what God did for me.
 I called out to God with my mouth,
 my tongue shaped the sounds of music.
 If I had been cozy with evil,
 the Holy One would never have listened.
 But God most surely did listen,
 God came on the double when God heard my prayer.
 Blessed be God: Adonai didn’t turn a deaf ear,
 God stayed with me, loyal in God’s love.
 
							There’s much to be thankful for. In case you didn’t know or you haven’t heard it in a 
							while…
 
 I am thankful for you. Your presence in my 
							life—whether it is a physical one or simply a 
							digital one—makes my life brighter. You are a gift 
							to this big and beautiful world.
 
 I offer these words as a blessing and a benediction. 
							They come from one of my favorite poets and writers, 
							Ralph Waldo Emerson:
 
							“Cultivate the habit of being grateful for every 
							good thing that comes to you, and to give thanks 
							continuously. And because all things have 
							contributed to your advancement, you should include 
							all things in your gratitude.”  
							Happy Thanksgiving, friends! Pass on the goodness of 
							life wherever you find yourself this week![Adam Quine, pastor of First Presbyterian Church 
							in Lincoln]
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