The Lord is my strength and my shield; in him my heart trusts, and I am helped; my heart exults, and with my song, I give thanks to him. Psalm 28:7
Someone explained the difference between gratitude and thankfulness. Gratitude is what you feel when you are sick and a friend brings you soup and straightens your house. Thankfulness is a way of looking at the world and consciously noticing things that make you feel thankful, even in dark times. The concepts are interlinked.
Times are dark in America. Our democracy, science, health and economy are all under threat. For most of us, our eyes are wide open to this. We spend time learning to navigate the darkness. We wrestle with whether we're doing enough. We decide how much time to give to activism, how much to the suffering of others, how much to our own well-being and families. And yet, I haven't met anyone who is broken, and not because they are ignoring the challenge we face.
People keep rising up. They, we, continue with an attitude of thankfulness; we are consistently grateful, sometimes for what others are doing, sometimes for small pluses in our own lives. Speaking only for myself, the peace of God that I feel at this scary time in our country, really does pass all understanding. It is beyond rhyme or reason that while knowing the risks to medical research, fairness, minorities, refugees and beyond from this administration, hope and trust don't falter and wonderful things happen everyday.
Maybe the Lord is my strength and shield and maybe yours too. Maybe there is only one God with different names and different traditions, giving us the strength to endure and fight injustice. Maybe God is there for those who don't believe as well as those who do, because the love of God is there for all.
Sometimes you have a really good week and this was one for me. Nothing that special except that a grandson came to the beach where we are to spend some time with us before he heads off, back to university. He will be far from North Carolina, in Scotland. Like the rest of the family, we will miss him. We're one of millions of families who may not see their college-age kids 'till Thanksgiving or Christmas. With all that's going on in the world, this is not a big thing, a first-world problem that doesn't involve starvation or deportation or any physical hardship at all.
Or, one might say, with all that's going on in the world, this is a big thing--to have a good week. To have time with family anywhere, but especially this past week with Hurricane Erin offshore causing resoundingly loud waves and spray that settles in your hair and on your body.
And if we were to guess, I bet all of us had some good happen this week. Not that we ignore the plight of many in our country, but that we carry an attitude of thankfulness and look for and recognize for what we can be grateful. I was grateful for a wild and majestic ocean and a hurricane that went back out to sea without touching down anywhere. We were grateful to walk down to the sittum and join locals gathered to watch the waves, sharing their memories of other storms and hurricanes. In this mostly red corner of our state there lives a beach community that is less divided than connected. All are drawn to the sea, that very sea created on the Third Day according to Genesis.
A red flag warns of danger and not just at sea. We can be grateful for warnings, whether they prompt us to care for our democracy or for our safety on shore. May the Lord be our strength and our shield, and that forever. AMEN
Nina Naomi