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							Okay, I have a confession. Rarely do 
							I do these as your pastor. But, I have to make it 
							known. You ready? ...deep, dramatic breath...
 I’ve already started making my list of all the 
							things I want to do/accomplish in 2018.
 
 Yea, I’m one of those people. What makes me 
							different is that instead of calling it a “New 
							Year’s Resolution” list, I call it, “The Things I’m 
							Going to Try and Do that Will Bring a Smile to My 
							Face” list. What a catchy name, yea?
 
 Want to know what is number one on my list? To live 
							from a place of thankfulness.
 
 Did you know in Greek the word for thanksgiving is 
							Eucharist? Which is what the long prayer we offer up 
							before we celebrate communion is often titled “The 
							Great Prayer of Thanksgiving”.
 
 The Great Thanksgiving prayer is in fact that—a 
							prayer of thanks. It tells the story of the gospel; 
							it reminds us of God’s promises, Christ’s 
							faithfulness, and the Holy Spirit’s presence. The 
							Great Prayer of Thanksgiving gives thanks for 
							creation, then for redemption (a fancy word meaning 
							the action of God not leaving us to our own 
							devices), moving through Christ's conception and 
							birth to his suffering and death and then to his 
							resurrection and ascension. In giving thanks and 
							retelling the story of salvation history, we are 
							reminded of God’s graces and how in the simple meal 
							of bread and juice/wine, we are united as God’s 
							family, on earth, and in heaven.
 
 Communion, the Lord’s Supper, the Eucharist—it is a 
							meal of thanksgiving. It is a taste of what will be 
							and a reminder of how all of life is a gift. A gift 
							best experienced when shared with one another. So 
							yea, I want to live this type of life—a Eucharistic 
							life. And there is no better time to start than 
							today, in this season of thanksgiving.
 
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							I’m thankful for you, friend. I’m 
							thankful that somewhere along the way your story and 
							my story crossed, and that together we are telling 
							the life-giving story of God. What a story it is, 
							too. It is one full of beauty and heartache, good 
							times and hard times, bountiful harvests and valleys 
							of dry bones. Yet the thesis, the main point, the 
							good news in it all is the promise of God’s 
							faithfulness.  
							So, as we move into the official 
							start to these ‘holy days,’ I share with you one of 
							my favorite quotes from Presbyterian pastor and 
							writer, Frederick Buchner:
 The grace of God means something like: Here is your 
							life. You might never have been, but you are because 
							the party wouldn't have been complete without you.
 
 May you know how thankful we are for you. May you 
							know how delighted God is to call you God’s own. May 
							you know, in the deepest part of your being, the 
							truth in the psalmist words:
 
							God is God,
 And God has bathed us in light.
 Festoon the shrine with garlands,
 hang colored banners above the altar!
 You’re our God, and we thank you.
 O my God, we lift high your praise.
 Thank God—God’s so good.
 
 God’s love never quits!
 
							[Adam Quine, pastor of First Presbyterian Church 
							in Lincoln] 
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