Thanksgiving is tomorrow, and, once again, we are hosting.
The past two weeks have been filled with preparations of planning the menu,
figuring out when to make everything, and how to arrange the table and chairs
so everyone fits. I love this kind of stuff. I love getting great grandma’s
china out and setting the table all pretty. I love baking pies, and having my
house smell like fall spices. I love planning out my Thursday morning so I can
accomplish all the last minute things, and I love browsing through all the
Black Friday deals and trying to figure out if we need to go out this year.
(Yes, we do.)
Hosting Thanksgiving brings back memories from my childhood
of the preparation for 10 to 20 guests, and all the fun (I thought it was fun)
of getting the house and food ready. I have found that I am not very
sentimental about stuff, but I am sentimental about food – especially food that
comes with such exquisite memories. Perhaps that’s why Thanksgiving and
Christmas mean so much to me: the hard work of preparing was repaid with
wonderful memories of the fun and laughter of the day itself. This year, I am
thankful that we can once again host this wonderful meal and spend it with such
wonderful friends.
This year, we have the opportunity to celebrate “Thanksgivanukkah”
as the first day of Hanukkah is today! Hanukkah is not a story you will find in
the Old Testament because it took place in the second century B.C. So, here is
the story of Hanukkah in a nut shell:
In the 2nd century B.C., Judea became part of the
Seleucid Kingdom (Alexander the Great’s Greek Kingdom had been split into
Ptolemaic and Seleucid factions). Antiochus IV Epiphanes later invaded Judea in
175 B.C. to regain control of the province from the priests. After winning the
battle, Antiochus IV proceeded to loot the temple, stop all services, and in
167 B.C. he set up an altar to Zeus (yes, Zeus – the Seleucids were greatly
influenced by the Romans, who had not yet taken over from them) in the Temple.
He also ordered that pigs would be sacrificed on the Temple’s altar, thereby
desecrating the altar and Temple itself.

Judah ruled Judea until 160 B.C. when he was killed in
battle. His brother, Jonathan, the high priest took over, and later after being
assassinated in 142 B.C., the last son of Mattathias, Simeon, ruled in his
place. Simeon was murdered by his son in law, Ptolemy, in 134 B.C. who
continued to fight for Judea’s freedom, but was sympathetic to the Hellenistic
culture. This sympathy was a trait in all rulers after Ptolemy and facilitated
the entrance of Roman general, Pompey into Jerusalem. In 63 B.C. Jerusalem and
Judea came under Roman rule. In 37 B.C. Herod the Great, who was half Jewish
and very Hellenistic, was installed as ruler over the area by the Roman Senate.
The Maccabean Period was seen by the religious leaders of
Jesus’ time as a time of national and religious freedom from the oppression of
their rulers. This story was recounted every year during the festival of
Hanukkah and was as much a part of Jewish culture as the Indians and Pilgrims sitting
down to the first Thanksgiving dinner is for Americans. Therefore, when the
disciples asked Jesus in Acts 1:6, “Lord, are you at this time going to restore
the kingdom to Israel?” They are thinking back to the Maccabean Revolt and the
brief freedom Israel experienced under its rule. The idea of national freedom
had become such a centerpiece to their culture that it affected every aspect of
their worldview. They would spend the rest of their lives learning that the Kingdom
of God had both a physical and a spiritual aspect to it, and that they needed
to wait for the physical, yet prepare themselves and others for the spiritual.
This Thanksgiving, many of us will sit down to an amazing
meal, surrounded by friends and family, do some Black Friday shopping, watch
football, and enjoy having a long weekend to rest and recover from that amazing
meal,. But what do we really remember at this time? What is the underlying
principle that we celebrate?
Love.
God so loved us that He allowed His son to be sacrificed so
that we could be made free from the bondage of our sins (John 3:16). God gave
us great value and worth and declared us to be not-guilty. He calls us His
children, and graciously does not hold our sins against us, but gives us the
freedom we need to learn to live righteously and humbly under His rule and
authority. The early Christians were characterized by their devotion to
humanity, and their insistent belief that all human life was of value. This led
them to rescue babies that were left outside to die of exposure because they
were unwanted, and care for both the Christian and secular sick when plagues
swept through the cities, and all others left.
The pilgrims came to America looking for religious freedom,
and the opportunity to establish a community devoted to the will of God. The
Indians of the area did not see them as threats to their lives, but as
newcomers to a place, and reached out in love and respect to help those who were
so different from themselves.
This Thanksgiving, let us remember that we are truly
children of God who have been given what we do not deserve at a price that we
can never repay. Let us remember and thank God for those who are very different
from ourselves, but who have also been set free by the death and resurrection
of Christ both today and throughout history. I pray that we would all remember
how richly we have been blessed, and that we would not take these blessings for
granted, but forever rejoice and be excited about our life in Christ, and all
he has called us to. Happy Thanksgiving Everyone!
Happy Thanksgiving to you! Thank you for the reminder of God's love and grace. And the history lesson!
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