Thanksgiving Day
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November 27, 2025
Today's Reading: Luke 17:11-19
Daily Lectionary: Isaiah 1:1-28; 1 Peter 1:1-12
“[the lepers] lifted up their voices, saying, ‘Jesus, Master, have mercy on us.’” (Luke 17:13)
In the Name + of Jesus. Amen.
Today, we celebrate the blessed and historic feast of American Thanksgiving and try to keep the sarcasm off our faces. Pilgrims and Indians ate together, got along perfectly, and avoided arguing about politics. If you sprinkle some Jesus on it, there’s a sermon in there about who you’re thankful to. The problem is, I’m bad at it. All I can do is hang onto the losses. The what could have beens. I can come up with something to say at the table, but my heart just isn’t in it most years.
I believe that God has made me and all creatures; that He has given me my body and soul, eyes, ears, and all my members, my reason and all my senses, and still takes care of them. He also gives me a long list of stuff I can’t list here because of word counts. This is most certainly true. Still, it’s easier to find two things missing than all the ones there. That’s why trying to be more thankful doesn’t work for long. We don’t need Thanksgiving sermons here. We need Jesus healing the least of these. Us.
This is more than just a reminder to look on the bright side. Leprosy sermons aren’t about feeling better with your lot in life; they’re about Jesus helping people who can’t help themselves. He’s not with the worthy, but the outcasts, the unclean, and even helps those who don’t know what thankfulness really is. Even the nine who fail to return are still healed. Because Christ isn’t in it for the thank yous. He did it because He loves them. He bears the cross for them. And He loves you. It isn’t measured in how many things you can list at the table to give thanks for. It’s measured in the cross.
Only Samaritan was truly thankful because thankfulness isn’t halfhearted praise, but going back to the source for more. True thankfulness is getting seconds because that means more to whoever cooked for you all day than anything else. Go to the Thanksgiving Meal. The Eucharist. Communion. Then, go back for more. Thanksgiving is just returning to it over and over, heaping everything else that wasn’t enough on a pile, and rejoicing in forgiveness and mercy for it all.
In the Name + of Jesus. Amen.
Even so, Lord, quickly come To Thy final harvest home; Gather Thou Thy people in, Free from sorrow, free from sin, There, forever purified, In Thy garner to abide: Come with all Thine angels, come, Raise the glorious harvest home. (LSB 892:4)
Author: Rev. Harrison Goodman, content executive for Higher Things.
Audio Reflections Speaker: Rev. Richard Heinz, pastor at Trinity Lutheran Church in Lowell, IN.
This new devotional resource by Carl Fickenscher walks you through each week’s readings, revealing thematic connections and helping you better understand what is to come in worship each Sunday.