November 04, 2021
By Rev. Ginger Gaines-Cirelli
“Thank you.” What power these small words hold!
While researching his role as a butler in the film, "The Remains of the
Day," Anthony Hopkins interviewed a real-life butler who said his
goal in life was to blend into the woodwork of any room like a mere
fixture, a table lamp, an andiron. The real-life butler summed up an
excellent butler this way: “The room seems emptier when he’s in
it.” The goal is to do your work, fill the wine glasses, clear the plates
and silverware without being noticed, much less thanked.
That is the effect of ingratitude: it makes people disappear. You
are the center of your universe and can easily forget anyone else is
around at all, even if they’re the ones making sure you have all you
need! But a simple word of thanks makes people visible again, it
humanizes them.
Saying “thank you” acknowledges gratitude for what someone does or who someone is. And at an even more basic
level, to say “thank you” is to recognize someone’s presence, to acknowledge them as a fellow human being. If we
take others for granted, they can begin to feel invisible, dehumanized, and devalued.
An example: When I get so wrapped up in my work that I fail to say thank you to Anthony for the ways that he
supports and cares for me and for our shared life, then it is easy for me to forget all the ways he does those things. I
can feel “on my own,” put out, weary, and resentful – ways of being that do not expand my humanity, but rather wear
me down to a self-righteous nub. Gratitude is life-giving for all involved; saying “thank you” is no small thing.
This month as we celebrate Consecration Sunday and Thanksgiving, I encourage you not to take your important
relationships for granted. Say “thank you” to the people in your life, acknowledge God as the source, sustainer, and
guide of your life, and consider the role Foundry plays in helping you stay connected to God and others, providing
ways to participate in God’s work of love, forgiveness, grace, and justice in community.
God prepares the table for us. By God’s grace, we prepare the table for others. Let us always come to the table with
thanks!
Join us in preparing the table in 2022. Submit your estimate of giving at foundryumc.org/estimate.