I have always enjoyed Thanksgiving. It is probably my
favourite holiday, in part because I don’t have to worry about buying gifts,
but mostly because it is unequivocally hopeful.
One on our Thanksgiving traditions is to watch the musical,
“The Fiddler on the Roof.” It is a story about a family struggling with the
conflict between modernity and tradition, set against the systematic
persecution of the Jews in the early part of the 20th Century in
Russia. It is a story of love and hope in the midst of tragedy and pain.
Reb Tevye is a poor milk farmer and the father of five
daughters, some of whom are at the age when they are to be married. He sings
and prays and breaks the fourth wall (speaking directly with the audience),
thus working on the challenges of faith, fear and family.
I love the musical for many reasons. It has great and
memorable songs. It is filled with humour and wisdom. When it comes right down
to it, it is a great example of how to pray. If we think of the actual times
Tevye speaks or sings to God and the times he speaks to the audience as prayer,
we see the breadth and richness that prayer can bring us.
Tevye’s prayer is at time honest and hopeful, thankful
and mournful, angry and questioning, painful and life-giving. And every time
Tevye prays he is changed – his opinion, his behavior – something changes in
Tevye every time he prays. Prayer is never, and can never be about changing
God, it is always about opening out hearts and minds to God’s will. At the
heart of prayer is thanksgiving. Not every prayer Tevye prays is resolved, but
even those prayers bring him change and understanding. Even if that
understanding is a sense of hope, it is good.
On this Thanksgiving, be glad and rejoice and be open to
the sense of hope at the core or our human experience.
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