Harvest Thanksgiving at St. Paul's Hillsdown
Deuteronomy 8: 6-11; Psalm 92: 1 – 4; Luke 17: 11-19 The suffering of our lives and of the world has a tendency to drown out our gratitude. If we went around the room, I suspect we could pretty easily share things that weigh on our minds from our lives or from what we see on the news. What does it mean to give thanks in a world like this? Some might suggest we shouldn’t give thanks at all. Maybe we should just lament and mourn on behalf of the suffering in the world. We can imagine someone saying, “How dare we be happy and celebrate when such things are happening in the world?” In the ancient world there was a heresy called Gnosticism. One of the general beliefs of Gnosticism is that it believed that the world we live in was created by an evil power and we needed to escape this world to become free to go to the good immaterial world created by God. The physical world is a kind of a horrible prison for our souls. The Gnostics were named a heresy by the early Church becaus...