Something that happened over a hundred years
ago, or 70, or 50, or 20 seems irrelevant in our own time, but we mark this
date because we are called to stop and think and remember those who gave their
lives then, since, and who are giving
them now, including their loved ones ~ parents, spouses, and children who have
also lost an important person in their lives. Why is it important? If we cannot
imagine the people of those fairly recent times, how then can we relate to the
person of Jesus, and his disciples in their time facing the brutality of martyrdom
yet continuing to move forward with the courage and fortitude from faith in
Christ? We mark November 11 as more than a holiday, a word that stems from holy
day, as important to the collective memory of humanity, to learn from again
and again. Even more significant, we are to mark Christmas as a truly holy commemoration
well beyond mere decorations and gifts, and Easter as the signature of Christ
and Christianity, not just candy in colorful baskets.
As we move ahead in the calendar, next up is our Thanksgiving, a time set aside to remember, to cherish our families and friends, and stop to give thanks intentionally and consciously in prayer for the blessings of this life, far outside the scope of food and football. We are also called to add regularly to the blessings of others by our gifts to help those less fortunate, as well as gifts of time, talent, and monetary treasure to our parish. Most importantly, this season of remembering is to strengthen our own faith in Jesus our Christ, our Messiah, our Redeemer, who has welcomed the souls of all our faithful departed from the extraordinary of global wars and the ordinary difficulties and joys of day-to-day life. Jesus welcomes us, the living, in every moment of every day and asks only that we follow Him in our thoughts, words, and actions. In the Greatest Commandment, Jesus exhorts us to love God with all our hearts, all our souls and all our minds, and love our neighbors ~ the ones we like and the ones we do not like ~ as if they are ourselves. We all fail in so many ways, through wars within ourselves and with each other yet we can come back to Jesus, time and time and time again to ask forgiveness and Jesus will never fail us.
From The Book of Common Prayer, page 823:
25. For those in the Armed Forces of our Country
Almighty God, we commend to your gracious care
and keeping all the men and women of our
armed forces at home and abroad. Defend
them day by day with your heavenly grace;
strengthen them in their trials and temptations; give them courage to face the perils which beset them; and
grant them a sense of your abiding
presence wherever they may be; through
Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.
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