Eph 5:19,20; 1 Thess 5:18
This Thursday is Thanksgiving. One day in which we
like those early Pilgrims set aside time in our busy schedules to give thanks
to God. Now, there is nothing wrong with that but the word of God tells us that
this should be a continual, daily, attitude.
Eph. 5:19,20 tells Christians to "Speak to one
another with psalms, hymns and spiritual songs. Sing and make music in your
heart to the Lord, ALWAYS giving thanks to God the Father for everything, in
the name of our Lord Jesus Christ." And I Thes. 5:16-18 says, "Be
joyful always; pray continually; give thanks in all circumstances, for this is
God’s will for you in Christ Jesus."
Paul’s main subject here is PRAISE, THANKSGIVING.
Notice the other important words in these passages; ALWAYS, CONTINUALLY, and IN
ALL CIRCUMSTANCES. It sounds as if Paul is talking about a church service here,
especially in Eph. "Speak to one another with psalms, hymns and spiritual
songs. Sing and make music in your heart..." But he isn’t. He is talking
about a continual attitude for Christians, an attitude of the heart. How we are
to be to each other. But how, you may wonder, can we have this attitude
continually, especially "in all circumstances?" I believe the answer lies
in our perspective of thanksgiving. We need the proper perspective.
To be thankful in all circumstances, we need a proper
perspective of our circumstances and of God. Only then we will be able to give
thanks to the Lord always.
There are three attitudes that steal away our
gratitude. Three things that keep us from being thankful.
1. One is our pride.
This is the attitude that says, "Nobody ever gave me anything, I worked
hard for everything I have." For years you studied hard and now it is
finally paying off. With this kind of attitude, we feel that we have no one to
thank but ourselves.
2. Another attitude
that keeps us from being thankful is a critical spirit or constant complaining.
Instead of being grateful, this person will always find something to complain
about.
3. A third
attitude that keeps us from being grateful is carelessness. Someone once said
that if the stars only came out once a year, we would stay out all night to
watch them. But they are there every night and we have grown accustomed to
them.
The Israelites grumbled because they had no food so
God miraculously sent manna to feed them. Then they started to grumble because
it was the same thing every day. They had a miracle straight from God every day
but were no longer satisfied. Because of pride, carelessness or a critical
spirit we will never be truly thankful for all that God has given us.
Thanks is one word that is too seldom heard and too
rarely spoken and too often forgotten. If we would all adopt an attitude of
thanksgiving into our lives, our lives would be changed. We would savor each
day.
If any nation ought to be thankful to God and grateful
for his goodness, it ought to be the United States of America. If any people in
America ought to be thankful to God and grateful for his goodness, it ought to
be Christians.
THANKSGIVING SHOULD BE EXPRESSED
In Luke 17 we read about ten men who were healed by
Jesus of their leprosy. Out of those ten men only one came back to give thanks
and Jesus said, "Where are the other nine?" He was the only one
willing to take time to go back and say "thank you." Because of that
Jesus said to him, "Rise and go; your faith has made you well."
Have you ever wondered why Jesus said that? I mean
like the others, the man was already healed of his leprosy from the time they
went to show themselves to the priest. But when Jesus says to this one man,
"Your faith has made you well," he wasn’t just talking about a
physical healing, he was talking about a spiritual one, a mental one. He was
made whole.
We too are made whole by our thanksgiving.
Psychologists today tell us that sincere gratitude, thanksgiving, is the
healthiest of all human emotions. Gratitude produces more positive emotional
energy than any other attitude in life. And a thankful heart will endear others
to us and us to others. For you see thanksgiving is not only good for the giver
but also good for the receiver.
God appreciates our thanksgiving. It exalt Him up and
it glorifies Him. And thanksgiving endears him to us. It draws us closer. If we
are not grateful, if we do not express our thanksgiving, then it can have the
opposite effect.
OUR THANKSGIVING IS EXPECTED
Paul says we are to "give thanks in all
circumstances BECAUSE this is God’s will for you in Christ Jesus." This is
God’s will for us. And he knows, if we will do it, that our lives will be
changed.
1. This is the mark
of a Growing Christian
For example, a baby is ungrateful. You
can take a little baby when it has colic and walk the floor with them for hours
and when you put that baby down they don’t say, "Thank You." More
than likely, they will just yell a little louder. A child has to be taught to
be thankful. It just doesn’t come naturally. Sometimes you have to almost force
them to say thank you. When we realize how blessed we are by others and by God
and express that, we are growing.
2. Our thanksgiving
is also the mark of a Giving Christian
When we realize how much God has done
for us and how much he continues to do, we should be more than happy to give
something back to him. This comes through our time and also our financial
giving. Someone has said that for Thanksgiving to be real Thanksgiving, there
must be "Thanks" and there must be "Giving."
When we go to a restaurant, we are more
than happy to give a good waitress a 15% tip, but for some reason, many have a
problem with giving God 10% of all the good gifts he has given us. We need to
ask ourselves if we are truly thankful. Remember God loves a cheerful
giver..... Thanksgiving is a mark of a growing Christian, a giving Christian.
If you are thankful to God then you will not be
constantly critical and pessimistic but eternally Thankful. Though the
difficult times are just that - they will not break you.
Paul says in II Cor. 4:8, "We are hard
pressed on every side, but not crushed; perplexed but not in despair;
persecuted but not abandoned; struck down but not destroyed...For our light and
momentary troubles are achieving for us an eternal glory that far outweighs
them all. So we fix our eyes not on what is seen, but what is unseen."
Yes the Psalmist was right, ’It is a good thing to
give thanks unto the Lord." Have you been going through some
difficult times? Have you prayed but they’re still there? Have you
told yourself to keep on going and it would someday disappear - but it got
deeper? Then why not try THANKSGIVING?
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