Sense-ational

It’s that time of year when, through harvest services or harvest suppers, we express our thanks for ‘all that the Bountiful Giver has given to gladden our days’, as one harvest hymn puts it - and there are so many good things.
But perhaps we should also give thanks for our senses by which we can appreciate these good things. Without the gift of our senses, the world would be a very different place to us. However great its sensational variety in every respect might be, we would find it monotonous - a colourless, tasteless, odourless, silent world. In a truly literal sense, it would be a senseless world.
Without our eyes and the gift of sight, we could not appreciate the marvels of colour and shape. So many strong colours to brighten the world and so many tints and shades to give us problems when we are thinking of redecorating; colours which tell us when fruit is ripe and announce the changing of the seasons, which add so much to the sparkle and spectacle of fireworks as well as the charm of flowers. Flowers are also very varied in their shape and shapes can delight us, not only in flowers bu the delicacy of snowflakes, the sweeping contours of spectacular landscapes, the grace of moving animals and the beauty of the human face and form.
Without ears and the sense of hearing, we would miss the rustle of leaves in the wind, the music of our favourite band or singer, and the whispered endearments of a loved one. There is the tinkling sound of goldfinches and the full-throated song of the blackbird and, through the nature programmes on TV, the deep growl of the lion and the haunting singing of the whale in long distance underwater conversation.
Without our nose and the sense of smell, we would miss so much when we dine – the smell of crisply fried bacon, fresh-baked bread and freshly-made coffee – or go into the garden – the fragrance of roses of sweet peas, and the smell of rain on warm earth.
Without our tongues and the sense of taste, everything we eat would taste the same, no difference between smoked salmon and roast beef, curry or custard. No more pleasure in chocolate.
Without our sense of touch, we could not experience the smoothness of a baby’s skin, the fuzz on a peach, the cold of an ice cream, the warmth of a friendly touch or the tenderness of a loving embrace.
No matter how sensational the world is, from the details of the tiniest insect to the vast space of the cosmos, it would be meaningless to us if we didn’t have our senses which make in sense-ational.
When you give thanks for 'all good gifts around us’, thank God for your senses.
‘He gave us eyes to see them,
And lips that we might tell
How great is God almighty,
Who has made all things well’
(C.F.Alexander)








