St Oswald's Magazine StOM 1610 | Page 9

TO SAY THANK YOU FOR LIFE All through history man saw himself as dependent on nature and on the gifts of creation. Most religions know ceremonies which are meant to say thank you for a successful harvest. Christianity has incorporated this thanksgiving in the Eucharist when we thank for bread, which ‘earth has given and human hands have made’, and for vine, ‘fruit of the vine and work of human hands’. Churches usually celebrate Harvest Festival on the first Sunday in October. The celebration is integrated into the church service. When I was a child, fruits and garden produce were displayed around the altar, especially large pumpkins or marrows, which looked impressive but were not very useful to the people who got them as gifts. Often the gifts went to old people’s homes and I was surprised that these people seemed to be more interested in the communal singing than in the gifts, as we were asked to help taking the gifts there and also take part in a little service which contained well known hymns as ‘we plough the fields and scatter’. The harvest was and still is in many churches combined with an activity of fund