Using their blessings in the spirit of thanksgiving
It is a blessing to give.
It is a blessing to receive.
At times one is on the receiving end, and at other times, the giving.
The giving and the receiving completes the circle of a relationship.
That continuous cycle seals a connection between people that is one aspect of the spirit of thanksgiving.
A little over a year ago – on Sunday, November 2, 2014, Peter and Mary Zook of Delft lost the barn on their farmsite to a fire.
Fast forward one year, and, this Thanksgiving, the Zooks have a new barn ready for pigs and calves and a couple of dairy cows and other livestock – thanks to the support and work of a bevy of volunteers.
The Zooks are new to the area, having only lived near Delft for a little over a year-and-a-half. They are part of a group who have decided to call themselves the Delft Christian Community. Members resettled in-and-around Delft, making the small Cottonwood County village their home.
In just a couple of days (Friday, November 13 and Saturday, November 14), neighbors, acquaintances – along with people who were initially strangers – built a barn, and cemented a friendship. Volunteers for the barn-raising included local folks from the Mennonite Disaster Service (MDS), along with members from the Elemendorf Hutterite Colony in Mountain Lake and the Altoona Hutterite Colony from Altoona, Iowa, in addition to workers from the Delft Christian Community.
By gathering to cooperate on such a project, lives were touched and hope, faith and wholeness were nurtured.
Blessings all around.
Because, it is not what we say about our blessings – but how we use them – that is the true measure of our thanksgiving.