Monday, September 5, 2016

Year C - Thanksgiving Day (October 10, 2016 in Canada and November 24, 2016 in the United States)


I suspect that in both Canada and the US Thanksgiving worship happens in a variety of settings.  Some will read these texts at community services.  Others might use them on the Sunday before Thanksgiving instead of the Christ the King/Reign of Christ texts.  And, who knows how others will use them.  Leave a Comment and tell the rest of us how you will use them.


General Thanksgiving Ideas

Involving children in community services is a good way to draw a crowd and to introduce children to their community’s religious base.  Anything that works on Sunday morning will work at a community service.  Particularly good ideas include:

Have the children’s classes in participating congregations illustrate hymns that will be sung.  Scan their drawings and project them during the singing.

Include children’s choirs in the singing.  Either gather children in all the churches into one choir or invite several children’s choirs to sing at different points in the service.  The former requires at least one rehearsal which can be a minus (another meeting) and a plus (chance for children to sing with friends in other congregations and to be in at least one of their buildings).  The latter requires no extra gatherings, but can turn into a choir competition – not terribly conducive to giving thanks.


Thanksgiving music for children

Before singing the Doxology, invite all the children to meet you at the front.  Note that you are about to sing a song that begins, “Praise God from whom all blessings flow.”  Define “blessings” as those things that are so good they make us happy to be alive.  Name one or two of your blessings, then ask the children to name a few of theirs.  (And, yes video games are blessings to certain people.  So, don’t let the congregation laugh at them!)  Then send the children back to their seats to join the congregation in singing the song praising God for all their blessings.

In advance get children (maybe in their classes) to draw illustrations of the verses or even phrases of one or more of the songs you will sing.  Scan them and project them while the song is being sung.  Probably the best songs to illustrate are
For the Beauty of the Earth
All Things Bright and Beautiful
I Sing the Mighty Power of God

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The old standard Thanksgiving hymns (“Come, Ye Thankful People Come” and “We Gather Together to Ask The Lord’s Blessing”) are not easy for children.  They are filled with unfamiliar vocabulary and metaphorical harvest images.  Older adults learned them at school when they were growing up.  Children today do not. 

“We Plow the Seeds and Scatter” is a better harvest hymn.  It sets concrete harvest images to a simple tune.  Help children further by offering them illustrated word sheets and walking through the structure of the three verses before singing them.

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“Now Thank We All Our God” is a more general thanksgiving hymn children can sing at least parts of.

“Grateful,” a song by John Bucchino, is illustrated in a book of the same name that comes with a CD of Art Garfunkel singing the song.  One way to use it in worship is teach the congregation the chorus, then listen to Garfunkel sing joining him on the chorus as the book is projected.  With a small group of children follow the pictures in the book as you sing together.  The third verse is the most child accessible.  I would start there to introduce the song and define “grateful.”  Many of the ideas in the other verses are beyond the experience of children.  (Hear David Campbell sing the song and follow the lyrics printed beside it HERE.)

Good Thanksgiving Books to Read in Worship

Sometimes misreading a word opens the way to new possibilities.  In reading Thank You, God, for Everything, by August Gold, I read “journey” but thought “journal”.  That led me to see all the pages that followed as if they were pages in Daisy’s journal with each one thanking God for different things.  That leads me to wonder about giving children (all worshipers?) small empty notebooks and colored pens or pencils with which to add pictures and words about things for which they are thankful.  It could be a great worship art project.  Invite worshipers to add to it as they sing and pray their ways through the service.  If you do this, be sure to ask children to show you at least one page of their work as they leave the sanctuary.  Encourage families to share their “Thank you God for Everything” journals when they get home.  (You may or may not need to read any or all of Thank You, God, for Everything in worship.)


The journals could be small purchased notebooks or several pieces of paper folded in half and nested together (maybe held by a staple or tied ribbon.


The Secret of Saying Thanks, by Douglas Wood, insists that giving thanks makes us happy.  “We cannot feel thankful and unhappy at the same time.”  “We don’t give thanks because we’re happy.  We are happy because we give thanks.”  The book can be read in about 8 minutes.  With a small group sharing the pictures as you read is the way to go.  With a larger group, bring props (a big yellow paper sun, a flower, a tree leaf, a rock, a stuffed animal -a bird if you can find one, a shiny silver star cutout, a bottle of water, and a big red paper heart) to display or hand to people nearby as you read the pages about the things which lead us to be thankful.

Thanksgiving begins with noticing what is all around you.  It is easy to overlook our blessings.  Remind worshipers of Moses noticing the burning bush, stopping to look at it, and meeting God there.  Then read and discuss Elizabeth Barrett Browning famous poem.

“Earth's crammed with heaven,
And every common bush afire with God,
But only he who sees takes off his shoes;
The rest sit round and pluck blackberries.”
Elizabeth Barrett Browning

Especially if it is the beginning of Thanksgiving week, assign worship homework.  Encourage households or individuals living alone to take time once each day this week to list things for which they are thankful.  Suggest that they do it at the same time each day – before or after a meal, at bedtime, whenever works.  Households turn it into a prayer by saying together “we thank you, God” after each thing is named by each person.  Individuals can add the phrase as they identify their blessings.  (If you want, admit that you hope that by doing this every day for a week, people will decide to keep doing it.  You are encouraging a simple daily prayer practice.)

In the congregation’s prayers include prayers for the long holiday weekend.  Some children are looking forward to seeing extended family members. Others are dreading a boring, nothing special holiday.  Those excited about family gatherings often face undesired seating assignments at “the feast,” uncomfortable sleeping arrangements, and long trips in cramped cars.  All are worthy of prayer.

Commenters in in past years suggested the following:

One of my favorite times with the children was the year we learned how to say "Thank you" in many languages from our congregation, and ended by using those words for our prayer together: Dear God, thank you for your good gifts. Merci. Danke. Gratias. Molte grazie! In Jesus we pray, amen.

In our (pre-school) Junior Church we open every session by asking what the children are thankful for, and then singing "Thank you Lord for this fine day" (https://www.communityofcelebration.com/zen-cart/media/Thank_you_Lord.mp3), adding lines to the song according to what children have said. We have given thanks for McDonald's, and even for the ceiling of our room. Why not? As you say, "Thanksgiving begins with noticing what is all around you."

For a YouTube video that expresses it thanks in very intergenerational pictures and simple words watch below.  Thank you Hubert Den Draak.



Help families prepare ways to say thank you to God at their feast by providing a list of suggestions.  Go HERE for a starter list.


This Year’s Texts

There are lots of groups in today’s texts.  Children instinctively understand what it means to define yourself by the group to which you belong.  When meeting someone new children start with their name and age but quickly begin naming the groups to which they belong.  The unstated assumption is that if you know which groups I belong to you know who I am.  Usually they name sports teams and activity groups in which they participate.  The trick is to help them look to larger groups of which they are apart – in this case the people of God.  All of today’s texts call us to rejoice and give thanks in the context of groups.  Deuteronomy gives thanks for being among God’s people and sharing their story.  Psalm 100 calls to “all the earth” and insists that we are “sheep of his pasture” (a flock).  Paul calls the Philippian Christians to rejoice because they are a part of church and belong with Christians everywhere.  Alert worshipers to these groups early in worship and challenge them to listen for other groups and to think of groups that make them rejoice.


Deuteronomy 26:1-11

Act out this scripture as it is read.  Either have children (or all worshipers) come forward placing baskets of fruit and vegetables on the Table or ask a single household to carry in one large basket on the Table or on the floor in front of the Table.  A single family might then turn, and read or recite the creedal verses.

Focus on gratitude for food. 

Arrange a large cornucopia of fresh fruits and vegetables on a table at the front and pile canned goods for the local food bank around the table on the floor.

Create a responsive prayer about all the phases of food production from growth to farmers to deliverers.  (There is a sample on page 192 or Forbid Them Not, Year C.)  The congregation’s response to each petition is “Give us this day our daily bread.”

Invite children to come forward to share apple slices.  Before distributing them, with the children identify everyone who was involved in getting this treat to you.  Go all the way back to God who planned for the raw material and the process that produced the apples.  Then enjoy the apples with a prayer of thanks.



All The Places to Love, by Patricia MacLachlan book, captures the connection to the land that underlies this text.  In it a boy tells about all the places he and members of his family love around their farm.  Read all or parts of it, challenging children and other worshipers to think of the places they love most and where what happens there makes all the difference in the world(It can be read aloud in a little over 5 minutes.)

In a year in which we are all especially aware of people on the move around the world, the story of the Jews coming from hard times in Egypt into a promised land could be paralleled by stories of immigrants who have come to your country/community in search of a good place to live.  People (individuals or whole families), maybe in native dress, could briefly tell the story of their coming as they leave vegetables on the central table.  Conclude with a statement of who we are that all worshipers can read together. 

How Many Days to America, by Eve Bunting, is the story of a family of refugees coming by boat to America.  One guesses they came from Cuba, but this fall children will hear in their story all the middle east refugee stories they have heard during the last year.  It takes 8 minutes to read aloud – a bit long.  But, it might be a good way to recall the immigrant histories of either Canada or the United States.

Psalm 100

Remember that children need to hear that God’s courts and gates are other words for God’s church.

Turn the psalm into a congregational reading with many short lines that new as well as experienced readers can follow.  (The two groups could be choir and congregation or two halves of the congregation.)

! * ! * ! * ! * ! * ! *! * ! * ! *! * ! * ! *! * ! * ! *! * ! * !

Psalm 100

Leader:        Make a joyful noise to the Lord, all the earth.
Group 1:      Worship the Lord with gladness!
Group 2:      Come into God’s presence with singing!
Leader:        Know this!  The Lord is God.
Group 1:      Know this! We belong to the Lord who made us.
Group 2:      Know this! We are God’s people, and the sheep                                   of God’s pasture.
Leader:         So, enter God’s gates with thanksgiving,
Group 1:       Come into the holy courts with praise.
Group 2:      Give thanks to God and bless God’s holy name.
Leader:         For the Lord is good;
Group 1:       God’s steadfast love endures forever,
Group 2:      God’s faithfulness is for all generations.

 Based on NRSV and Presbyterian Book of Common Worship

! * ! * ! * ! * ! * ! *! * ! * ! *! * ! * ! *! * ! * ! *! * ! * !

If you sing “All People That on Earth Do Dwell” in the USA, have a soloist or the choir line it out for the congregation.  That is the way the pilgrims sang it.


Philippians 4:4-9


See suggestions about reading The Secret of Saying Thanks, by Douglas Wood, in “Good Thanksgiving Books to Read in Worship” at the beginning of this post. 


Jewish midrash includes several stories about how people responded to God’s dividing the sea for the slaves to walk through on dry land and then bringing it back together to drown Pharoah’s army.  It seems some of the newly free slaves complained that walking through the sea was scary and hard.  They could only think about how tired and dirty they were.  But Miriam and others, who were also tired and dirty, danced and sang songs praising God for the incredible miracle they had just experienced and their new freedom.  After describing the situation, ask which group was “right.”  Of course, both were at different levels.  Then ask who they would rather travel into the wilderness with.  Younger children will not be able to follow this.  But older children can be drawn into the possibility of rejoicing being more a matter of one’s attitude toward what happens than what actually happens.  They can be helped by parallel examples - maybe siblings who get similar sweaters from their grandparents.  One child is delighted and the other discards it as dumb.

“Rejoice, Ye Pure in Heart” really needs a festal banner to be waved and walked through the congregation as the song is sung.  Make a flag banner featuring the word “Rejoice!” or select a praise banner from your collection.  Introduce it as a “festal banner.”  Before singing the hymn, practice the chorus once so even non-readers can sing along.  Also point out that the last verse is the same as the first and summarize the message of the two middle verses with reference to “in gladness and in woe” in verse 2 and the call to rejoice even at death in verse 3.

Another way to use this hymn is to have the congregation sing just the chorus in response to each verse of Psalm 100.


John 6:25-35


Maybe especially on Thanksgiving when there are other symbols around, it is hard for literal thinking children to make sense of Jesus’ talk about being the bread of life as this passage is read.  The bottom line is that as good as bread/food is, God’s love and forgiveness are better and more important.  One of the few ways to make that point to children in a Thanksgiving worship service is to take the bread or wafers from the Communion Table and holding it in your hands list things for which you are thankful.  If children are seated with you, invite them to add things for which they are thankful.  Then insist that wonderful as all those things are, the very best gift we have is God’s love and forgiveness.  Note that every time we eat bread we say thank you to God for that gift.

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