Gabriel Salguero

Gabriel Salguero

Pastor and Executive Member, Latino Leadership Circle

Rev. Gabriel Salguero is a pastor and executive member of the Latino Leadership Circle. The "On Faith" panelist is also director of the Hispanic Leadership Program at Princeton Theological Seminary. He received his M.Div. from New Brunswick Theological Seminary and is a Ph.D. candidate in Christian social ethics at Union Theological Seminary in New York. He and his wife, Jeanette, co-pastor the multicultural Lamb’s Church of the Nazarene in New York City. He serves on the board of Sojourners. Gabriel has been called one of the emerging voices of Latino evangelicals. He also serves as a member of the Equal Employment Advisory Commission for the state of New Jersey. Close.

Gabriel Salguero

Pastor and Executive Member, Latino Leadership Circle

Rev. Gabriel Salguero is a pastor and executive member of the Latino Leadership Circle. The "On Faith" panelist is also director of the Hispanic Leadership Program at Princeton Theological Seminary. more »

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Be Grateful for Gifts that Matter

Often holidays are filled with tension (perhaps waiting for hours in an airport, commuting three hours in traffic on what is usually a 45-minute drive, having to cook a large dinner and then having people cancel at the last minute, debates over politics and faith at the dinner table). Still, perhaps the biggest tension comes from unmet expectations. We expect all things to go well and have a holiday season like in a television special. Life we learn continually is not a sitcom.

Thanksgiving is a time of enormous gratitude for me. Two years ago on Thanksgiving Day my father was released from the hospital after receiving a liver transplant from a donor who remains anonymous to this day. Two years removed from that experience I've reflected on the significance of the gift of this organ donation and its significance for me and my family.

Perhaps the lesson I most learned from that "Thanksgiving of Organ Donations" is that my expectation should be to love life, friends, and laughter. The faith, religion, age, gender of that generous organ donor were not at the center of my gratitude. Rather, that she or he gave the greatest gift, "life." So this holiday season your family and friends may not give you the gift you expected they may not agree with you politically or ideologically, or agree about anything. Still be grateful for their life and expect only that love is its own reward.

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