The battle of Thanksgiving: Holy days go head-to-head

How to win the war between gratitude and purchasing power this Thanksgiving.

A Lego Thanksgiving centerpiece.

guruskl via Flickr

A Lego Thanksgiving centerpiece.

Customers flock to Best Buy on a Black Friday.

tshein via Flickr (CC)

Customers flock to Best Buy on a Black Friday.

Given the other conflicts raging here and there you may have missed this one: the Battle of Thanksgiving.

The Battle of Thanksgiving? Really? Isn’t the Thanksgiving holiday, which we celebrate this week, a time of sharing and savoring, drawing together in gratitude and grace? Isn’t it a time for remembering and telling stories, welcoming to our homes those who are far from their own, and giving thanks for the sheer gift and wonder of life, despite its losses?

Something like that is the idea.

But an alternate faith and order is waging war against even Thanksgiving’s brief twenty-four hours: Consumerism. Its temples are malls; it’s chapels, the big-box stores. Black Friday is its high, holy day.

Not only are a host of stores, including Wal-Mart, KMart, and Target, open for business on the national holiday of Thanksgiving, but this year the Black Friday shopping frenzy gets underway at the very stroke of midnight in stores and malls across the land of the free and the home of brave.

Best Buy, Target, Old Navy, Gap, Victoria’s Secret, the Disney Stores, and a dozen more will open their doors at midnight. Still, its a kind of rolling start, perhaps so buyers can experience the thrill of store openings in the wee hours at multiple sites in succession.

Sears and JC Penny open at 4:00 am, followed by KMart and Lowe’s at 5:00. Not to be left behind, Office Depot, Office Max, and Staples begin moving paper and office supplies at 6:00. Why, even Tractor Supply will open at 6:00 a.m. on Black Friday. Tractor Supply?

Note that these consumer meccas are dis-aggregated from community. They do not stand on any real Main Street. They are not locally-owned or small businesses. These they drive out of business. Moreover, all summon their minimum-wage-without-benefits employees to work, away from their own families and rest.

If the Occupy Movement really wanted to raise America’s hackles and get a very swift boot, it might try occupying the malls on Black Friday.

Two holy days, two faiths go head-to-head this week. One savors the idea of gratitude, a sense of harvest abundance, and enough. The other cultivates grab and grasp, an anxious sense of scarcity, of never enough. A person may be forgiven for feeling a bit schizophrenic.

Thanksgiving would teach us the patience associated with the season’s cycles, planting and harvest, and an older and mostly by-gone America; consumerism offers 24/7 convenience and the instant gratifications of a global economy and its sweat shops.

If Thanksgiving would savor contentment, consumerism thrives by discontent: the burning need to have the newest and latest, preferably before others do.

Thanksgiving invites and encourages generosity; Black Friday is all about profit-maximization.

Or maybe the two aren’t so different after all. Perhaps Thanksgiving too is more about consumption than grateful hearts, more about more than enough?

One can hardly blame shoppers — whose incomes count for less year by year — for seeking the sales. We are hectored into buying, not only by truly degrading advertisements, but by banks that brandish credit and debit cards like drug dealers offering crack and speed. Not to be outdone, politicians urge shopping as sacred duty.

“The world is too much with us; late and soon, Getting and spending, we lay waste our powers.” Wordsworth’s words seem never more true. 

Consider something really counter-cultural this year. Keep Thanksgiving. Let it linger, even beyond its appointed twenty-four hours.

Savor gratitude slowly and let it grow. Say a deep thank you for all that cannot be gotten, but only given: nature’s wonder, faith’s wisdom, prayer’s power, the beautiful wherever it finds a toe-hold, and acts of kindness that suprise and touch us.

Even if it's bad for economy, say no to consumerism’s anxious litany, “Never Enough, Never Enough.” Refuse to trade your identity as citizen and child of God for a real mess of pottage, “Identity: Consumer.” Sort out the difference between need and want. Refuse to buy crap. Cultivate a sense of abundance that depends not on stuff, but upon the intangibles of community, grace, and kindness.


About the Author

Anthony B. (Tony) Robinson is President of Seattle-based Congregational Leadership Northwest. He speaks and writes, nationally and internationally, on religious life and leadership. He is the author of 10 books. Crosscut readers may particularly enjoy Common Grace (Sasquatch Books). His blog, "What's Tony Thinking?", is at his website, www.anthonybrobinson.com.

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Comments:

Posted Wed, Nov 23, 2:02 p.m. Inappropriate

I like it. Thanks.

andy

Posted Wed, Nov 23, 2:36 p.m. Inappropriate

"Refuse to buy crap"

Oh yeah, I always go shopping for crap. "Hey honey! Don't we need more crap in the house? It's 50% off!" And then I put it in my shopping bag... What are you talking about?

Now, "refuse to buy into phony sales deals." I can get behind that. Or "buy things people need before you buy things that you just want. As in, become Aunt Bee who gives out new socks for Christmas instead of X-box games. It is a recession after all you can get away with that. And who doesn't need new socks?

GaryP

Posted Thu, Nov 24, 8:37 a.m. Inappropriate

Amen, Mr. Robinson. And I love the idea of the Occupy folks occupying the malls. May it happen.

mspat

Posted Thu, Nov 24, 10 a.m. Inappropriate

Thanks for this important article.

Valuable insight into how the world of consumerism has changed our society, not necessarily for the better. I don't usually use the word "family values" but in this instance it might be a predicate for another word, "society values." Except in this case "society values" are driven not by family but by something different and dangerous: "consumerism" (replacing the other ism's), brought to us by a relentless media campaign and the perceived need to buy "bigger and better" than the neighbor.

The holiday season has leapfrogged not only Thanksgiving but Halloween as well. Please, do not call it Christmas. It might offend. And don't forget to buy a 6 foot inflatable Santa for your front yard! They are 50% off somewhere! Costco now, Costco forever.

Posted Thu, Nov 24, 10:38 a.m. Inappropriate

Thanks Tony, for a thoughtful read and good words for reflection on Thanksgiving Day.

marveck

Posted Thu, Nov 24, 12:35 p.m. Inappropriate

Why do otherwise sane people want to go out at three in the morning to shop for toys, small appliances or name brand underwear? I've never understood that. But, I don't understand why people watch "Two and a Half Men", either; yet both activities seem to be popular.

dbreneman

Posted Thu, Nov 24, 5:23 p.m. Inappropriate

In keeping with the mood, I have been rereading The People's History of the United States. I am just getting to the part where beyond starting imperialist wars looking for the consumers needed to justify early over-production, corporatists, between times, were coming to see a less bloody way to continue gathering wealth while at the same time continuing to quiet worker unrest—cozy up to so-called labor leaders and together turn their OWN workers into consumers. It makes one wander what took them so long and to realize that all of us writing now with nostalgia about the vastly more reasonable days of our youth have this dawning to thank.

More generally one realizes that the quest for consumers has been going on for a very long time (from almost the first Thanksgiving, if one considers the activities of the countries of origin of the colonizers). The other thought again in the air is just how far "globalization" will and can go before we decide to take another look at what shared sustainabily means, something the Wobblies may or may not have come to understand if they had not been so summarily wiped from the face of existence.

afreeman

Posted Fri, Nov 25, 8:29 p.m. Inappropriate


Mr Robinson's liberal arts 'educated' notariety continues to escalate.

American genocide is in focus along with Ryan Crocker.

http://www.prosefights.org/deaton/deaton.htm#robinson

Mr Robinson's daughter is whitman college class of 2009. I am of the class of 1959.

Ryan Crocker is 1971 graduate english major of whitman college.

Insight on how these unfortunate matters developed may be clear?

billp37

Posted Sat, Nov 26, 3:49 p.m. Inappropriate

Thanksgiving has lost. Black Thursday/Friday was more successful than ever for retailers. President's Day, Memorial Day, Labor Day and Veteran's Day are just a few of the casualties in the losing battle with consumerism. The Martin Luther King Jr. Day is already fighting against car sales and electronic sales. In a few years consumers will be camping out on Wednesday evening for the Black Thanksgiving Day sales. The Thanksgiving feast will be a McTurkey meal at McDonald's.

2cents

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