Showing posts with label Thankfulness. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Thankfulness. Show all posts

Saturday, September 22, 2018

An Attitude of Gratitude

"He appointed some of the Levites as ministers before the ark of the Lord, even to celebrate and to thank and praise the Lord God of Israel." 1 Chronicles 16:4

In a devotional I was reading the author asked the question, "Have you ever known a church hiring someone to just to be thankful? When King David set up the worship leaders for the tabernacle, he appointed certain Levites just to continually thank and praise the Lord. Thanksgiving was their job." He continues by asking, "What if our churches hired a person whose only job was to go around with a thankful attitude and to motivate others to have the same? We could call them Pastors of Gratitude. How would that look on their business card?" Gratitude means the quality of being thankful; readiness to show appreciation for and to return kindness. There is nothing wrong with having someone whose sole responsibility is to be grateful. Scripture talks about being thankful in many places. In fact, we are encouraged to "give thanks in all circumstances; for this is God’s will for you in Christ Jesus (1 Thessalonians 5:18)." Let us imagine that you are one these Pastors of Gratitude. What would the job description look like? It would probably read something like this: "Must celebrate, be thankful and praise the Lord at all times. The individual will be required to continually express the love of God without ceasing. The job requires that you are always patient and kind. You will never be jealous or boastful or proud or rude. You will never demand to get your own way in any situation. You will never be irritable. At no time will you keep a record of being wronged by anybody on the church staff or within the congregation. You will never rejoice about an injustice done to anyone associated with this church. You will always rejoice whenever the truth wins out. You will never give up on anybody. You will never lose faith either in yourself, your God or anybody else associated with this church. You will always be hopeful in every circumstance no matter how dire. Finally, you will endure through every circumstance whether good or bad or whether it involves you or anybody else associated with the church. You will never fail this church, its staff or the congregation who attend it each week." Are you excited to take this position? Even more, are you thankful to be a Pastor of Gratitude? The author of the devotion continues by saying, "God wants to hire all of us for that job. It's His will for us to be grateful Christians." I understand what he is trying to get at, but in all of this, there is something that is missing when it comes to being grateful or thankful in our relationship with God, the church and the world around us.

Gratefulness and thankfulness must be real. If our gratitude doesn't come from a place of authenticity, whatever actions we display will come across as hollow and phony. This is because the circumstances of life don't create our character, they reveal it. When you are truly thankful for what God in Christ has done for you then it will be easier for you to bear the fruit of the Spirit of God His love is producing through you. Otherwise, you will be forced to live your Christian existence as if it truly is a job; something you are only doing because you have to or because you hope to get something from it you are missing in your relationship with God. When you know your identity in Christ, what you have inherited as a result of your faith in Jesus and how God looks at you, thankfulness will be a natural byproduct of your walk. When you realize God is meeting the deepest desires of your heart for unconditional love, total acceptance, meaning and purpose to life, you will be thankful. Furthermore, as a child of God, through faith in Jesus Christ, you are now completely forgiven of all your sins, holy, blameless, righteous, sanctified, justified, have eternal life, are a citizen of heaven, free from God's wrath, at peace with God, complete, cleansed, filled and sealed by the Holy Spirit and so much more. You won't need to be a Pastor of Gratitude, but will already be a grateful person because of what God has done for you and the inheritance you have freely been given. It is this knowledge in the core of your spirit that allows you to be thankful in every situation. It is why I believe the Apostle Paul said, "Not that I was ever in need, for I have learned how to be content with whatever I have. I know how to live on almost nothing or with everything. I have learned the secret of living in every situation, whether it is with a full stomach or empty, with plenty or little. For I can do everything through Christ, who gives me strength (Philippians 4:11-13)." Paul had been imprisoned, shipwrecked, beaten, betrayed, abandoned, and so much more. Yet, he was thankful in the midst of this because in his weakness the Lord gave him strength. That same Jesus who strengthened Paul, giving him encouragement and a thankful heart, lives inside each and every born again Christian. Knowing that there is nothing that we desire that can't be found in Jesus and that He has given us Himself to meet our needs is the foundation of what gives us an attitude of gratitude. In the end, we don't work for God as if He has hired us for a job, but rather He is working through us because we are resting in the job He has already completed. That gives us a reason to celebrate, to thank and to praise the Lord.

Saturday, February 3, 2018

God's Phone Number

‘Call to me and I will answer you and tell you great and unsearchable things you do not know.’ Jeremiah 33:3

You are a parent getting ready to embark on a road trip with your family. Your three sons and your daughter are driving the family's SUV while you and your spouse are behind them in a Semi Truck. On your journey you encounter bad weather and the roads begin to become icy and slick. As you are looking at the SUV in front of you, it begins to lose control on the icy roads. Just prior to leaving on your trip you prayed Jeremiah 33:3, asking for God's mercy and protection on your drive ahead. As the SUV begins to go sideways on the road you scream out, "Father, I need You, Lord! Stop this vehicle!" The SUV leaves the road and begins to go down the hill. You continue your prayers, "Father, in Jesus name, stop that vehicle!" The SUV comes to a stop just inches before it would have side-swiped a tree. The individual sharing the story said that Jeremiah 33:3 is "God's phone number." They said that God wants you to call out to Him and He will answer, He "will not put you into voicemail .... He answers immediately." It is always encouraging to hear testimonies of answered prayers, especially, when certain tragedy is averted. This testimony inspired another Christian to mention Jeremiah 29:12, which reads, "Then you will call on me and come and pray to me, and I will listen to you." When I hear these testimonies and the verses people refer to that inspired them, my mind thinks of two questions; what is the opposite conclusion someone could reach from this testimony and what is the context of the verses being used? What do you say to those who call out to the Lord, but tragedy still strikes; the SUV slides off the road and hits the tree? We all know stories of people who suffered tremendous loss and been through unspeakable tragedies, whether through car accidents or various other tragic circumstances. Did they suffer because they didn't have "God's phone number" or did their prayer go to His "voicemail"? I am not trying to be funny or dismiss the blessing that comes from tragedy being averted. Give God the glory! But, when we give God praise can we be guilty of unintentionally misrepresenting Him in some way? When someone calls out to God and doesn't get the answer they want, how are they to feel about the God who says He loves them, but didn't "answer their call"? How do they reconcile the appearance that God answered one person's prayer for safety, but not their own? These are real questions that deserve an answer.

The context of Jeremiah 33:3 is the Lord telling Jeremiah to call on Him and He will reveal to Jeremiah what His plan is to restore the Jews in their fight against the Babylonians. Now, this doesn't negate the idea that we can't call on God in our time of need. The Bible tells us to, "Cast all your anxiety on him because he cares for you (1 Peter 5:7)." But, we need to make sure we are using verses properly and not giving the impression that calling on Him will result in things working out to our liking because we know that isn't always the case. As for the context of Jeremiah 29, it is similar to chapter 33 in that God is promising the Jews He will listen to them on the condition they are obedient to what He commanded them to do while in Babylon; settle down in the city, start families, make the city prosper (verses 5-7). So, what do you say to someone, specifically a Christian, who called out to God, but still suffered tragedy? Along with being as compassionate as possible, you tell the truth. That truth is to, "give thanks in all circumstances; for this is God’s will for you in Christ Jesus (1 Thessalonians 5:18)." This doesn't mean to give thanks that you suffered a tragedy or to be okay with the pain and suffering. It also doesn't mean that God is responsible for the suffering you experience or it is His will that you suffer.  It means to give thanks regardless of the circumstances. Now, it may take some time before the Lord can find a way to utilize these circumstances for our benefit. It has been said that, "The Lord is participating in our lives ... and as a participant, there often is a period of time that takes place for Him to do certain things." Think back to some event in your life that you struggled making sense of at the time it happened. However, later on in your life you looked back on that event and was able to see the good that came from it. It is in that span of time that we grow and mature which allows us to see the events of our lives in a different light. Many testimonies that people have about the Lord originate from terrible circumstances in their lives that God used to teach them truths about themselves, life or God Himself. In turn, we can use what we have learned to help others when they go through difficult circumstances. That is why it says, "Praise be to the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of compassion and the God of all comfort, who comforts us in all our troubles, so that we can comfort those in any trouble with the comfort we ourselves receive from God. For just as we share abundantly in the sufferings of Christ, so also our comfort abounds through Christ (2 Corinthians 1:3-5)." It is not about having "God's phone number" to call in our desperation for immediate action in circumstances beyond our control. It is asking God, "What can I be thankful for in these circumstances that will help me learn to trust and depend on You even more?" This is the truth that we are to call upon in our time of need.