Thanksgiving is coming! Can you believe that? For many of us, that means holiday traditions, decorations, special meals, and time with family. As mothers, we work especially hard to make this season meaningful. We want our homes to feel warm, our food to be delicious, and our atmosphere to reflect love. LLike many people, this is one of my favorite times of the year.
But every year, as the leaves turn autumn, The scent of pumpkin pie fills the kitchen, I stopped and asked: What’s at the heart of this season?
thanksgiving family traditions
I am deeply grateful for the years I have spent with my own husband and children, and now their spouses and grandchildren. Over the years, with God’s help, we have strived to build a strong, close-knit family. I’ve tried to establish traditions over the years, but I’ve also learned that even the sweetest traditions can quietly drift away and become something more significant. us than he.
We know that God “abundantly gives us all things to enjoy” (1 Timothy 6:17), but we also know that life is about more than just fun. The challenge is balance and learning to celebrate with gratitude without making the celebration itself the center of everything. Because there is a bigger story, a bigger plan.
In light of the Gospel, holidays should not just revolve around doing everything “just right” for one’s family. As always, we have the opportunity to love and serve others and lay down our lives for others.
“This is how we know what love is. Jesus Christ laid down his life for us. And we should give our lives for our brothers and sisters. ” 1 John 3:16
the other side of the tablecloth
Luxurious and beautiful food, decorations, traditions, and well-ironed tablecloths are all good things. But they extra. They are not festivals themselves. The actual feast is about the heart behind it: gratitude, grace, generosity, and love. There are far more important things than perfect meals and matching napkins.
A peaceful home where God sets the pace.A relaxed atmosphere that allows God to change our plans. Flexibility to always have space for another person at the table. A mother who doesn’t get depressed even when a sweet potato falls on the floor. (Yes, that was a year ago! We laughed, scraped, and just ate!) People were always welcoming, hugging, and loving. Even if they are difficult people to love. We found people who had no place to go and made them part of our family. I overlooked transgressions and assumed the best of others. It held traditions loosely and kept people first.
When you live this way, gratitude takes deep roots. We begin to see Thanksgiving not as a day in November, but as an attitude of mind, a way of living every day of the year.
An overflowing feeling of gratitude
Genuine gratitude is more than just a feeling that comes up when life is going well. It is an act of worship. Declaration that God is good even if the situation is otherwise. Gratitude changes our whole perspective. Interruptions become invitations, inconveniences become opportunities, and traditions become tools for hospitality and elegance.
When our hearts are filled with gratitude toward God, that feeling of gratitude will naturally overflow into the way we treat others. Jesus perfectly modeled this for us. Even on the night of his betrayal, he gave thanks before breaking the bread (Luke 22:19). He expressed gratitude even in the face of sadness. It’s the kind of gratitude that turns an ordinary family gathering into a sacred space.
Imagine what would happen if we asked God to view the Thanksgiving table not just as a special meal, but as a service. From the noisy old man to the shy neighbor, each person sitting there reminds us of the people God has called us to love. When we create space at the table, we create space for God to move.
Let’s try it out
Here are some simple, heart-level ways to practice gospel-centered gratitude this Thanksgiving.
Pray before making plans.
Before you start cooking, cleaning, and coordinating, gather your family together to pray. Ask God to make this Thanksgiving more than food and decorations. Ask God to open your eyes to opportunities to love and serve.
Set additional locations.
Literally, when you set up the table, you set one additional location setting. This is a visible reminder that your home is open to whomever God brings. Pray as a family that the Lord would fill that seat with someone who needs His love. It could be a neighbor, a college student far from home, or a friend walking with a sense of loss.
Assign “Kingdom Work.”
Assign each family member a role that helps create a space for connection rather than chaos. Perhaps one person’s job is to greet guests at the front door, help with the dishes, or watch out for people sitting alone. The goal is presence, not perfection.
Let the main things be the main things.
When something goes wrong (and it will), let’s laugh together. Make the atmosphere elegant. Remember, people won’t remember if your rolls were homemade or not, but they will remember how yours was made. I felt it.
Please look outside.
Maybe there is a single mother near you who would like to join you. Perhaps an older couple in your church would be blessed to be invited to join you. Ask God to keep someone in your heart and persevere in your prayers.
The Gift of a Gospel-Centered Family
As mothers, we set the tone. When our hearts are at peace and our eyes are fixed on Jesus, our homes will reflect that. A Thanksgiving centered on the Gospel is not a Thanksgiving where everything goes perfectly, but a Thanksgiving where the love of Christ is revealed in everything.
Family is a gift, but it’s not something to hoard. God designed the family to be a symbol of His love and a means by which His grace is displayed to the world. God wants to use your home, your table, and your laughter as a place for His Gospel.
Take a deep breath as you prepare for Thanksgiving. You don’t have to do everything. You need to love well. Let’s turn gratitude into worship and worship into service. Make your home a place where others can see how the love of Christ is lived out in their daily lives.
Scriptures to meditate on
“Be grateful in any situation. For this is God’s will for you in Christ Jesus. ” ―1 Thessalonians 5:18“Don’t forget to show hospitality to strangers. By doing so, some of us may be showing hospitality to angels without even realizing it. ” —Hebrews 13:2“Let the peace of Christ rule your hearts and be thankful.” ―Colossians 3:15“We have all received grace upon grace from God’s all-sufficient grace. ” —John 1:16
thanksgiving prayer
Thank you, Dad, for all the wonderful and perfect gifts: to family, to food, to laughter, to the beauty of this season. But most of all, we thank Jesus for laying down his life for us and showing us what true love looks like. Help us not to cling too tightly to traditions and plans. Open your eyes to those who need to experience things like youness through us. Give us hearts ready to serve, hands ready to welcome, and lips full of gratitude.
May our homes reflect your peace, our tables reflect your generosity, and our conversations reflect your grace. Teach us to be grateful not only when life feels full, but also when it feels fragile, knowing that your love lasts forever. In the Governor’s Office of JesusWonderful name, amen.
Gina Smith is a wife of 37 years, mother of two, and grandmother of three. She is a writer and author, and wrote her first published book during the empty nest years. She has a passion for working with young people, encouraging them, strengthening them in God, and learning from them. Gina can be found on her website www.ginalsmith.com and her book Everyday Prayers for Joy can be found wherever books are sold.
