For which is
the greater, one who sits at table, or one who serves? Is it not the one who
sits at table? But I am among you as one who serves. Luke
22:27
Our
annual Thanksgiving Sunday provides an opportunity for us individually and
collectively to offer thanks to God for his goodness and kindness during the
past year, As we reflect on our lives we will discover that there is much for
which we ought to be thankful and it is our bounder duty to express thanks and
show our gratitude to God. It is easy for us to take life for granted and forget
to thank God and persons for their kindnesses.
How
can we show our gratitude to God for his kindness and mercy? I would like to
suggest to you that we can show our gratitude to God by living a life of service
to humanity. As we serve we follow the example of Jesus who came to serve and
not to be served. Jesus reminds us that the great one is the one who serves and
not the one who sits at table. For Jesus, greatness involves being the servant
of others. The idea of service to others might not find readily acceptance in a
culture that is characterised by individualism and selfishness. The society in
which we live with its emphasis with its emphasis on materialism and success at
all cost does not foster the idea of service. We live in a rat race environment
that aborts the whole concept of service and does not encourage many people to
have a positive view of service as a virtue which is vital for community living.
From
a Christian perspective service to humanity has to be understood within the
context of love for God and love for neighbour. We love God as we serve our
neighbour and we serve God as we serve our neighbour. This is the point made by
Jesus in the story of the separation when the Son of Man comes in
judgement:
“Truly, I say to you, as you did it to one
of the least of these my brethren, you did it to me.” Jesus
calls his church to be a community of faith that has service as its hall mark.
The early church was known for its care of the weak and outcast. It served the
needs on its members and the community and played a significant role in the
social life of the community where it became established. Christian service
challenges all people to forego the desire for fame and glory and become
servants in the tradition of Jesus Christ.
Service
to the community as an expression of our gratitude to God has the potential to
destroy and remove from the national scene envy, greed, jealously and selfish
ambition as we work for the common good. It allows us to interact with each
other and as such can be a catalyst for social change since it has the potential
to break down the barriers of fear, race, colour, stereotypes, discrimination,
prejudice, suspicion, and the many other negatives that keep us apart and make
us enemies.
Our
service to humanity should not be motivated by reward but by love for the
brethren.
The
service we give to our community must go beyond charity and hand outs. It must be a service that empowers people and
helps them to take control of their lives and development. It must be a service
that makes people independent and not dependent. It cannot be a service that makes mendicants
of persons, it must make them self supporting and aid their total
development-physical, spiritual and mental. It must be a service that liberates
people from the oppressive forces at work in our society. We need to examine and
reflect on what we are doing within the context of service to humanity, if our
service is to have a redeeming impact on the people we serve.
Let us
confess that as a church, as a people and as a nation we have not always been
responsive to the call to serve humanity. At times we have allowed religion,
politics, class, race and colour to stand in our way and prevent us from
embracing the concept of service to humanity. We have sinned and we ask God’s
forgiveness and pardon.
We
serve; this can be the rallying cry of all people as we offer service to
humanity as a sign of gratitude to God for all his mercies and blessing. Thanksgiving Sunday is a call to
service.
To serve Thee as Thou deservest
To give and not to count the cost
To fight and not to heed the wounds
To toil and not to seek for rest
To labour and not to ask for any reward
Save that of knowing that we do Thy Will.
Amen