A Message of Gratitude for Thanksgiving

A Message of Gratitude for Thanksgiving

Lately I’ve been thinking about the different ways we enter into gratitude. Sometimes we come to it as a deliberate practice, as when we get ready for sleep by reviewing the day just ending, with an eye to all that it held for which we’re thankful. Other times we enter gratitude out of surprise: someone we love tells us how much we mean to them, or an unexpected gift tumbles into our lap, and gratitude fills us spontaneously.

gratitude-picThere is also a kind of back-handed way to enter gratitude, when something bad happens and we count our blessings because it wasn’t worse. Recently, my mother-in-law took a bad fall when the car she was climbing into began to move before she had managed to get all the way in. She came down hard on the asphalt and was scraped and bruised, and after a couple of hours in an emergency clinic came out with stitches in her elbow and bandages in four other places. It was an unfortunate event, but we were all deeply grateful nevertheless: “It could have been so much worse”.

What I would like to achieve one day — what I aspire to, in a sense — is not to become expert in these and all the other ways to enter into gratitude, but rather to stay there, to dwell there, as my chosen way of being alive to the world. The Catholic writer David Steindl-Rast puts it this way: “What really counts is that we remember that everything is gratuitous, everything is gift. The degree to which we are awake to this truth is the measure of our gratefulness. And gratefulness is the measure of our aliveness, [since we are] dead to whatever we take for granted. To live life open for surprise, in spite of all the dying which living implies, makes us ever more alive.”

We are entering challenging times, with daunting new threats to justice, human dignity and the health of our planet under a Trump administration. But we will find our way forward, grounded in the twin imperatives of resistance and imagination. And at the core of all that we are called to will be gratitude: for companions and community, determination and courage, boldness, inspiration, steadfastness, and all the many ways that love will be made manifest among us.

Call to Standing Rock: Dec. 4th Interfaith Day of Prayer

As the courageous Water Protectors at Standing Rock face escalated acts of violent repression, we at UUCSJ continue to be deeply moved by the power of the #NoDAPL movement. We are especially grateful for the opportunity to collaborate with Rev. Karen Van Fossan of the UU Fellowship of Bismarck-Mandan and other UU leaders who have been deeply engaged in on-the-ground solidarity with Native coordinators of the Oceti Sakowin Camp. Karen offers the following invitation to the UU community and to all people of faith and conviction to answer Chief Arvol Looking Horse’s Call to Standing Rock for an Interfaith Day of Prayer on Sunday, December 4th. Please read and circulate widely to amplify this timely opportunity for solidarity.


This week, in below-freezing temperatures, unarmed water protectors just north of Standing Rock survived shocking assaults from water cannons. Many were traumatized, and some needed emergency room care. In the aftermath of these attacks, and in the months prior, my congregation has received countless messages from people around the country – and world – asking, “What can we do?”

Meanwhile, we have received one of the most important invitations we are ever likely to receive, as people of faith and conviction. Chief Arvol Looking Horse, Keeper of the White Buffalo Calf Pipe Bundle, has called upon each of us to join him at Standing Rock on Sunday, December 4th, for an Interfaith Day of Prayer. In solidarity with indigenous people and mutual love for the water, it is my hope that you and your communities of faith will participate in this history-making day.

As those who have visited know, the nonviolent water protector movement at Standing Rock is deeply rooted in prayer. Each day I spend at Oceti Sakowin camp, I feel myself challenged and inspired to live a more prayerful and faithful life. We awake with prayers, dine with prayers, go to rest with prayers, and pray continuously throughout each day.

The camps at Standing Rock are based on the conviction that prayer, especially collective prayers, can protect our living water. Your prayers – and your presence – mean the world. I would be honored to see you here.

For more information and to register to participate, please visit:https://tinyurl.com/standingrockdayofprayer

To learn more about the Dec. 4th Interfaith Day of Prayer and other opportunities for solidarity, please join me in a conference call discussion on Wednesday, November 30th at 6:30pm CST. This call will be facilitated by Unitarian Universalists who have been working directly with Native coordinators at Oceti Sakowin Camp. People of any and all traditions are welcome to join this conversation. Please register here.

Please share this call to prayer and solidarity widely. Thank you.

If you aren’t able to be here in body on December 4th, please join us in spirit by praying for the water and the water protectors in the morning, before meals, before bed, and whenever you are able. Please invite others to join their prayers with yours – with all of ours.

karenvf
In peace and faith,

Karen Van Fossan, M.Div.,
Minister, Bismarck-Mandan Unitarian Universalist Congregation