Giving Thanks & Receiving Hope
Advent 1 – NL 3
December 1, 2024
Our Savior’s, Faribault, MN
Daniel 6.6-27
Give thanks in all circumstances; for this is the will of God in Christ Jesus for you.
(1 Thessalonians 5.18)
At our weekly staff meetings, we take turns doing devotions followed by a time of prayers. This past Tuesday, Wendy was on deck and given the season, appropriately talked about giving thanks. In her devotion, she included the above scripture, “Give thanks in all circumstances.” As is typical of our staff devotional time, there ensued a lively and thoughtful conversation about what “all circumstances” meant. Both Pr. Drew and I reflected on the Community Thanksgiving service last Sunday evening at Christ Lutheran Church and the power of the reflections given by a lay person from each of the three congregations. Each reflection, though different, expressed gratitude in difficult circumstances.
So, I began reflecting about Daniel and wondering if he gave thanks in his circumstances. I think it’s easy to imagine Daniel giving thanks for the presence of the angel who stops up the mouths of the lions so they cannot eat him and then prevents them from pouncing on him. Yet, Paul’s encouragement to the Thessalonian church undergoing persecution says, “all circumstances.” That left me wondering whether Daniel gave thanks for everything.
For example, in his circumstances, did Daniel give thanks for his colleagues who wanted him out of the way? Did he give thanks that they went to extraordinary lengths to kill him, probably out of jealousy? He was a foreigner exiled in a foreign land who had risen to great influence and power. Did he not pay attention to relationships enough that they could accept him as an equal? Was his position, once a source of blessing now something hard to give thanks for? Did he wish for a less visible and risky occupation?
And while he was sitting in that den, did Daniel give thanks for King Darius? Though the king seemed to appreciate Daniel and his gifts, Darius also appears to be something of a clown. Darius also seems to be weak and easily manipulated by the other courtiers. And being a Mede, not a Persian, was he trying to impress everyone with his power? Did Daniel give thanks that he served someone who could be so unpredictable?
And what about the focus of the king’s wrath after he pulls Daniel from the lions’ den. Not only were the conspirators doomed to a horrific death, their wives and children suffered as well. Did Daniel give thanks in those circumstances? And what about the edict that King Darius makes regarding the religion of the Jews? A few hundred years after Jesus’ crucifixion and resurrection, a different ruler, the Emperor Constantine, made Christianity the official religion of his Empire. Some people observe that he did Christianity no favors by doing so. Would that have been the case for Daniel and his people?
This is pretty heavy for a Sunday morning after Thanksgiving, but it points out that the story of Daniel in the lions’ den is deeper and more complicated than our Sunday School faith. Sunday School faith is important, but we know that we grow up seeing the world as more gray than black and white. Most scholars believe that Daniel was written during the reign of Antiochus IV Epiphanes, about 200 years before Jesus was born, crucified, died, and resurrected. Antiochus was a Syrian ruler who committed many atrocities including blaspheming the temple with abominable sacrifices. Using stories of a folk hero set during the Babylonian exile a few hundred years earlier, the author seeks to give encouragement and hope to the Jewish people experiencing great persecution and hardship. It’s like we tell the story of George Washington cutting down the cherry tree saying, “I cannot tell a lie.” The story of Daniel reminds us that even encouragement in hard times is complicated but also necessary.
Today is the First Sunday of Advent and the candle we light is the Hope Candle. As the days get darker, we light more candles to remind us that Jesus is the Light of the World that no darkness can overcome. Today, we are sustained by the hope that Jesus brings. Whatever lion’s den you find yourselves in today, know that there is nowhere that God cannot be. Giving thanks in all circumstances can be complicated, but the presence of God never is. Thanks be to God. Amen
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