A Blessed Thanksgiving to our
American followers! In celebration of this day of gratitude, please reflect
with us on these words of thanksgiving preached by Saint John Paul II:
Let us give thanks to the Lord our God!
These words we take from the very heart of the Eucharistic
liturgy. Eucharist means thanksgiving. Today, as we meet around this altar, our
first desire is to give thanks. …In this way we wish to express what is the
most characteristic element of the Eucharistic liturgy.
Our sacrifice and our prayer in union with the Sacrifice of
Jesus Christ - in the sacramental identification with him - is above all a
great act of thanksgiving by the Church.
...We thank God for his existence: for the fact that he is
God, for his Godhead, for his omnipotence and holiness, for his truth and love,
for his eternal plan for the salvation of man and the world.
We thank the Father for the Son and the Holy Spirit. We
thank the Son for the Father. We thank the Holy Spirit because through the love
of the Father and the Son he is the uncreated Gift: the source of all the gifts
of created grace.
The Apostle Paul writes: “This is what I pray, kneeling
before the Father, from whom every family, whether spiritual or natural, takes
its name: Out of his infinite glory may he give you the power through his
Spirit for your hidden self to grow strong” (Eph. 3:14-16).
Man looks into his own heart, into “the hidden self,” and he
offers up thanksgiving to the very mystery of the Godhead. For he, man, has
been created “in the image and likeness of God” (Gen. 1:26), and he is now called for this reason to give
particular thanksgiving. We give thanks to God for the fact that he is God in
whom is found the eternal Model of our human essence. We thank him for the
Godhead, for the inscrutable mystery of the Trinity, for the Father, the Son
and the Holy Spirit.
We give thanks for everything that is the work and fruit of
grace, whereby human hearts share in the intimate life of God himself.
For this is how Paul continues to write: “…so that Christ
may live in your hearts through faith, and then, planted in love and built on
love, you will with all the saints have strength to grasp the breadth and
length, the height and depth; until, knowing the love of Christ, which is
beyond all knowledge, you are filled with all the fullness of God” (Eph. 3:17-19).
We give thanks to God for the fact that he is God: for this
absolute fullness that he is.
And we also give thanks for this dimension of our humanity,
which is our sharing in God’s nature, in the intimate life of God.
We give thanks for grace and holiness. In a particular way
for the grace and holiness that in the course of the centuries has been shared
in and continues to be shared in by the sons and daughters of this land: “Bless
the God of all things, / the doer of great deeds everywhere, / who has exalted
our days from the womb / and acted toward us according in his mercy” (Sir. 50:22).
Indeed, we give thanks for the fact that he, God, allows us,
human beings, to share in the messianic mission of Jesus Christ, his eternal
Son who became man. We thank him for the fact that he has made us the People of
God and has sealed our mission on earth with the priestly, prophetic and royal
seal through our sharing in the mission of Christ himself.
Christ says to us in today’s Gospel: “You are the salt of
the earth. But if salt becomes tasteless, what can make it salty again? …You
are the light of the world. A city built on a hilltop cannot be hidden. No one
lights a lamp to put it under a tub; they put it on the lampstand where it shines
for everyone in the house” (Matt.
5: 13; 15).
These are eloquent words, demanding words. And in the light
of these words we give thanks for our Christian vocation.
We wish to understand this vocation in all its different
forms, and to penetrate it with the light of faith and of our life-blood. We
want to fulfill it. We truly want to fulfill it!
How else can we express our thanks for the gift of our
vocation in Jesus Christ?
St. John Paul II, Pray for
Us!
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