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Nov 20, 2025

This month at Holy Covenant, our theme is still Sabbath: Rest in God. We’ve been talking about rest for our clergy, rest for our bodies, rest for our souls. But what about rest for our attention — especially when the turkey is ready, the table is full, and every screen in the house is glowing?
So this week, The Digital Disciple brings you a little Thanksgiving parable: “The Turkey, the Tablet, and the Table.” No theology degree required — just a sense of humor, a phone that pings too much, and a heart that secretly longs for a quieter kind of holiday.

It’s Thanksgiving Day. The turkey is golden, the mashed potatoes are doing their best impression of a snow-capped mountain, and the cranberry sauce is shimmering like a stained-glass window.
But the people around the table? They’re not entirely here.
The table is beautiful. The food is ready. But hearts and minds are scattered across a dozen different timelines, far from the room where the actual miracle — being together — is happening.

Just as Grandma clears her throat to say grace, it happens.
The Wi-Fi crashes.
Not a slow, gentle fade — a full-on digital blackout. The little bars vanish. The spinning wheels freeze. Texts stall mid-send. Screens go strangely, accusingly still.
For a moment, panic ripples around the table:
But the longer the silence stretches, the more something else begins to happen.
The phones lower. Eyes lift. People actually look at one another. The room discovers a sound more surprising than a text tone: the sound of its own quiet.

With nothing left to refresh, someone finally reaches for words instead of a device.
A story surfaces about Grandpa’s first Thanksgiving away from home and the year the turkey never thawed. Someone remembers the time the rolls burned so badly they had to be hidden under a towel “for liturgical reasons.” Laughter bubbles up like gravy simmering on the stove.
One by one, people start sharing:
By the time someone realizes the Wi-Fi has crept back to life, no one rushes to reconnect. The phones stay face-down. The conversation keeps going. The table, finally, feels full.
No one says it out loud, but it’s true: for a few holy minutes, they stopped being digital turkeys and became a family again.
Sometimes Sabbath doesn’t look like a perfectly planned retreat or a silent sanctuary. Sometimes it looks like slow conversation and burnt rolls, shared stories and shared silence, a table where no one is performing for a camera — just being present with the people God has given them.
This Thanksgiving, if the Wi-Fi goes out (or if you choose to turn it off on purpose), maybe that isn’t a disaster. Maybe it’s an invitation. A doorway into the kind of rest our souls have been craving all along.
Choose one “screen-Sabbath moment” for your Thanksgiving.
However you do it, let this be the year you don’t just scroll through Thanksgiving — you live it.
#TheDigitalDisciple | #ThanksgivingSabbath |#GratitudeOverScrolling |#DigitalSabbath |#FamilyAtTheTable |#FaithAtHome |
#SabbathRest |#HCUCCEverywhere |#ProgressiveClergy

✍️ About the Author:
Eric Miner is Holy Covenant’s digital prophet, website artisan, and social media storyteller.
He believes that technology, when touched by justice and grace, becomes sacred space for all who wander in hope.
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