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Home » Categories » Holidays & Special Occasions » Thanksgiving Holidays » Six Ways to Invite God to Thanksgiving Dinner » Printer Friendly

Six Ways to Invite God to Thanksgiving Dinner

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Submitted Monday, November 12, 2007
Nina Amir (152)
Pure Spirit Creations
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Just like the Pilgrims so long ago, when most people sit down to Thanksgiving dinner they express gratitude for the heaping plate of food before them. Unlike the Pilgrims, however, whose thanks were offered specifically to God in heartfelt prayers, today too many people's words of gratitude are offered in a cursory manner. Before putting that first forkful of turkey into their mouths, they say their prayers as a necessary formality without much thought to a Divine Presence.

It's easy to find ourselves feeling physically full but spiritually empty at the end of the Thanksgiving holiday feast. Much like other holidays, religious or otherwise, many of us forget to invite God to our Thanksgiving table.

In other words, we don't look at the bigger picture. We don't factor in how God might have had a hand in creating the food we are about to eat, in the abundance and prosperity that made it possible to purchase and prepare the feast or in our safe arrival at the Thanksgiving table. Thanksgiving offers a wonderful opportunity to put God into the picture, which transforms the holiday into a spiritual and meaningful one.

With a little thought and planning, we can transform empty Thanksgiving observances into meaning-full and spirit-full rituals and traditions. And we don't have to be particularly religious to do so. To achieve this, we need only have a belief in God and a desire to have this particular holiday be a spiritual experience. If we possess these, we are well on the way to creating a meaning-full and spirit-full holiday.

In addition, incorporating any or all of the following six steps into a Thanksgiving celebration will help change an empty holiday observance into a meaning-full and spirit-full one:

1. Voice your intention to have a spiritual experience. You can simple state your intention aloud or write it on a piece of paper Intention has an awesome ability to manifest. So, clearly intend that this Thanksgiving celebration will feel and be spiritual for you. Imagine that your intention serves as an invitation sent upward, outward, inward – wherever you believe God resides – to the Divine. After all, if you don't invite God to dinner, God won't know to show up.

2. Have faith that God will arrive. It's difficult to have a spiritual experience if you don't, first, believe in God, and second, have faith that you can have an experience of God. You can't ‘believe it when you see it' with God. You have to believe it so you can see it.

3. Develop the courage to let God in. Fear represents the largest thing that stops most people from having a spiritual experience. They are afraid of what the experience will be like, how it will change them, how it will affect their lives. You have to have courage to experience God. If you are too afraid to open the door when your dinner guest rings the bell, you'll be dining alone.

4. Create a sanctuary. This is a specially decorated and prepared space in which you plan to serve your Thanksgiving dinner. When you make the effort to create a sacred space for any celebration or holiday observance, you will find your festivities automatically take on a more spiritual atmosphere and energy. In other words, create a sacred space. In the Old Testament, God tells the Jews, "Build for me a sanctuary and I will dwell among you." (Exodus 25:8-9) Create a space in which God can "be" with you.

5. Remember to thank God. Create prayers especially for this day. If you don't want to write your own prayer, use an existing one from your own faith or from some religious or spiritual tradition. Prayers, being what they are – words spoken to God – automatically give the meal a spiritual bent and cause us to remember God.

6. Take on the role of spiritual leader. Don't rely on anyone else to make this year's Thanksgiving observance a spiritual experience for you. Take responsibility and make it that for yourself and for the other people sharing the holiday with you. Don't be afraid to try something new or to be creative. Bring spiritually symbolic items to your table or share spiritual readings. Orchestrate the meal in a way that feels spiritual to you, and other people will feel that energy as well.

By taking these six steps toward a meaningful and spiritual Thanksgiving observance, you can ensure that you not only invite God to your Thanksgiving celebration but that you feel – if not actually see –God sitting at your table.

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Nina Amir, the author of From Empty Practice to Meaning-Full & Spirit-Full Prayers & Rituals...in 7 Simple Steps, is currently writing Setting a Place for God, A Woman's Guide to Creating Sacred Space & Inviting the Divine to Dwell Within It. Enroll in her FREE teleseminar, "How to Transform Empty Holiday Celebrations into Meaning-Full and Spirit-Full Observances," on 11/13 at 5:30pm (PST) by visiting http://www.purespiritcreations.com .





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Comments on this article:


» left by April Lorier (0)
April Lorier
(1 year 55 days ago.)

Reader Rating: 5 out of 5
Thank you, Nina, for this reminder that God will not be present at the table unless He is invited. He is, above all, a Gentleman! I taught my children that ALL blessings come from God, and sometimes He uses other people to deliver them to us! I pray you have a truly blessed, wholly sanctified Thanksgiving!
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