Tag Archives: worship

The First Thanksgiving

thanksgiving-2903166_960_720When I mention Thanksgiving, what thoughts come to mind? Are there memories of a family gathering, or a big turkey dinner with all the trimmings? At my parent’s house we watched football games on TV (before and after our meal).

According to my smart phone, the word Thanksgiving is defined as an “expression of gratitude, especially to God.” When I looked up the definition of gratitude, my phone said, it is a quality of being thankful. Notice how the words “thanksgiving” and “gratitude” describe each other. Thanksgiving is showing gratitude and gratitude is being thankful.

When was the first thanksgiving? Most people would say it happened several hundred years ago in Plymouth, Mass. when the first pilgrims came to America and gathered around a table with their Indian guests. Was that really the first thanksgiving, or did one occur much earlier in history?

According to David Mathis in his article, “The True Story of Thanksgiving,” the first thanksgiving began thousands of years earlier. Genesis 1:27 us that God created man and woman in his own image. God created us to show Him gratitude, to give Him thanks and to worship Him. The first thanksgiving occurred in the Garden of Eden with Adam and Eve thanking and praising their Creator.

“Let them praise the name of the Lord, for his name alone is exalted; his splendor is above the earth and the heavens.” Psalm 148:13

We all know the story of Adam and Eve. They were created perfect. Death had yet to come into existence. They had everything they could ever want provided for them in the Garden of Eden. That is, until the tempter, began spreading his venom around Eden. Satan, being full of pride and love of self, showed ingratitude towards God. Ingratitude is a form of rebellion. It is through ingratitude towards God that sin abounds. The Apostle Paul in Romans 1:21 puts it this way, “Although they knew God, they did not honor him as God or give thanks to him, but they became futile in their thinking, and their foolish hearts were darkened.”

Ingratitude would lead Adam and Eve into sin.  Satan brought to their attention one thing they did not have.  They began to believe his lie that God was holding something back from them. God must not care about them. They began to covet the one thing they couldn’t have, to eat the fruit of the tree of knowledge of good and evil. They stopped being thankful for God’s provision and gave in to rebellion. When they ate the fruit, God’s judgment fell on them. Sin separated them from God and death followed sin.

From that day forward, humankind has been self-centered and materialistic creatures believing they can do a better job than God at providing for their needs. We want to determine what is right and wrong in our own minds. People are concerned more with their deprived physical needs than about their spiritual, eternal well-being. What people fail to realize is that God knows us better than we know ourselves.

Isn’t it reassuring to know God didn’t abandon us to our foolish darkened hearts? God sent his son Jesus into a thankless, ungrateful world. Here on earth he lived a flawless life, showering God with gratitude, thanksgiving and praise. Jesus exemplifies the word “thanksgiving.” The Gospels are filled of examples of Jesus giving thanks to God:

When Jesus fed the 4,000, “he took the seven loaves and the fish and having given thanks he broke them and gave them to the disciples. (Mark 8:6)

Before Jesus raised Lazarus from the dead, he lifted up his eyes toward heaven and said, “Father, I thank you that you have heard me.” (John 11:41).

The “Lord Jesus on the night he was betrayed took bread, and when he had given thanks, he broke it and said this is my body which is for you; do this in remembrance of me. In the same way after supper he took the cup, saying this the new covenant in my blood; do this, whenever you drink it, in remembrance of me.” (1 Corinthians 11:23-24)

Communion is sometimes referred to as the Eucharist. Eucharist comes from the Greek word Eukaistos, which actually means “Thanksgiving.”

Jesus didn’t just model thanksgiving for us. He died on the cross for our ingratitude, for our failing to exalt God, to praise him and worship Him as Lord. When we place our faith in Jesus, he redeems us from a life of ingratitude and restores us to fulfill the purpose for which we were created: to be thankful and grateful to God.

This is why it is important for us to be constantly striving to be more like Jesus, the only person who lived a perfect life of gratitude, honoring his father, God.

When we pray we need to remember to be thankful.

“Don’t be anxious about anything, but in every situation, by prayer and petition, with thanksgiving, present your requests to God.”  Philippians 4:6  

When we worship God we need to be thankful. The book of Psalms is full of thankful worship verses.

“Let us come before him with thanksgiving and extol him with music and song.” Psalm 95:2

“I will praise God’s name in song and glorify him with thanksgiving.” Psalm 69:30

When we walk with God we need to remember to be thankful.

“As you received Christ Jesus the Lord, so walk in him, rooted and built up in him and established in the faith, just as you were taught, abounding in thanksgiving.” Colossians 2:6-7

But we’re human aren’t we. There are times we fail miserably at being thankful, like when things aren’t going well for us. We can easily be overcome by hurt and tragedy. When we face trials we have a tendency to blame God.

When we face those trials we need to remain especially thankful.

But how do we do that? First, we can remain thankful by standing on the promises of God. Second, we should remember past and current blessings God has bestowed on us. Yes, count your blessings name them one by one!

My wife visited her family in North Carolina recently. When it came time to fly home, I prayed God would give her an uneventful and safe return. Her fight home, which should normally take about 3 hours turned into quite an ordeal, lasting well over 9 hours. I thought I had covered all my bases with my prayers and found myself having a tough time coping with her having to change planes, miss a connecting flight, and endure hour after hour of delays all caused by bad weather.

The ordeal continued to spin out of control at a time I needed God most. It became increasingly difficult for me to believe God was listening to my prayers. Thoughts like, “Does he really care about my wife and me” crept into my head. It wasn’t until she and I were safely together again that I learned just how involved God was guiding her every step. I felt ashamed when I considered my feelings of ingratitude. My heart turned to repentance and thanksgiving.

From now on I will always think of this incident in my life when I come across the verse:

“And we know (there’s a promise in those three words). And we know that in all things God works for good to those who love him, who have been called according to his purpose.” Romans 8:28

My wife will likely remember the promise I texted her in the midst of her ordeal :

“Be still and know (the word “know” is a promise) that I am God.” Psalm 46:10.

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May this Thanksgiving be a special time of blessing for you. Remember to give thanks to the God who created you, to the One who sustains you, and to Him who will never leave you or forsake you.

Psalm 119:169-176: Holy discontentment

The Psalmists commitment to God’s Word shaped how he regarded God. It is evidenced in his prayers and worship.  (169) let my cry, (170) my supplication come before you, (171) let my lips utter praise and (172) let my tongue sing.

Matt Chandler states “Great men of God have a holy discontentment; their hearts can never get enough of God.”  This desire is evident in the Psalmists  words, (173) let your hand be ready to help me, (174) I long for deliverance, and (175) let my soul live.

(176) I go astray like a lost sheep.  David, a shepherd, knew what it was like to seek out lost sheep prone to wander off.  Jesus fulfilled David’s prayer as Luke 19:10 tells us He came to seek and to save the lost.

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A Wiseman Observes

Ecclesiastes, in effect, is the veiled memoir of Solomon. The first two chapters record what he experienced in life from a human, earthly perspective “under the sun.” He found everything in life to be meaningless unless a person sought to change their perspective to include a heavenly, eternal one.  Ecclesiastes three, four and five offer insight into what Solomon observed. I covered his observations the life above man, the life within man and the life ahead of man in my previous post, God Orders Time.  Solomon concludes his observations in chapters four and five, discussing the life that surrounds man.

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Concerning Oppression (4:1) Oppression is very troubling to Solomon. He notices the tears of the oppressed and calls oppression a great evil

  • Dead are better off than oppressed and unborn better still.
  • God condemns abuse of power (Exodus 22:21, 23:9, Ps 62:10)
  • Godly people must refrain from oppressing others and seek justice for them (Isaiah 1:17; Micah 6:8; Matthew 23:23)

Concerning Toil and Achievement (4:4) These are called meaningless (in light of the certainty of death for every person under the sun).

  • Envy and jealousy motivate the work of overachievers, it drives them to out do others. They seek to be admired or envied by others. Erwin Lutzer calls envy “rebellion against God’s plan.”
  • Love is the opposite of envy, it rejoices in the success of others.
  • Laziness – the opposite of the extreme of the drive to out do others. The motivation of laziness is pleasure.
  • Both extremes (striving and laziness) amount to meaninglessness at death.
  • The one who isolates him or her self from relationships is also scorned.

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Concerning Relationships: two people are better than one (4:9)

  • At work, two people striving together offer more strength, creativity, talents, energy, etc.
  • When walking together, you will walk farther and avoid pitfalls
  • Watching out for one another helps us cope with attacks. These attacks don’t have to be physical, they can also be spiritual, emotional or financial.

A quote from Dr. David Jeremiah, “A friend is a treasure; two friends a treasure house.” Guard your friendships like you would a vast treasure. Friendship are eternal whereas possessions are temporal.

There are friends who pretend to be friends, but there is a friend who sticks closer than a brother. Proverbs 18:24 NLT

Concerning Relationships, Popularity and Power (4:13)

  • Life is about people needing people. Choose relationships over fame or power.
  • Solomon offers the example of a poor wise youth rising to the office of king, was he thinking of his father King David? If so, was the foolish king who wouldn’t heed a warning King Saul? That would make the youth, the king’s successor, Solomon himself.

And how does a man benefit if he gains the whole world and loses his soul in the process. Mark 8:36 NLT

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Concerning Worship (5:1)

William Barrick offers this comment on the first seven verses of Ecclesiastes chapter five. “Each person must anticipate his or her encounter with the eternal God beyond the sun.”

Solomon looks at our encounter with God, in worship, making vows and fearing (revering) Him.

  • How does your private worship apart from church compare to your public worship in God’s house?
  • Are we listening? To “listen” to God’s word carries the implication that we will obey it.
  • Is your offering to God “a sacrifice of fools?” That is does you outward display (your offering) run contrary to your inward convictions? The word “fool” in this case means one who is dull and obstinate (it’s a chosen outlook not a mental illness or malady).
  • Biblical prayer does not seek to manipulate God. You have probably heard the expression, “prayer changes things.” If you subscribe to that belief, you must consider also that prayer changes “us.”
  • With regard to vows, God takes his commitments to us very seriously, we need to do the same with Him.
  • Does God use “storms” in our lives to awaken us? People make vows during times of upheaval and uncertainty, but few keep them.
  • An unkept vow is equivalent to mocking God.
  • Fearing God does not equate to being afraid of him. God desires that we approach Him and walk with him. Fearing God equates to being in awe of His mighty power, revering Him has supremely holy, and being wiling to respond to that awesomeness and holiness by setting oneself apart from wrongdoing and evil, to be wholly devoted to Him.

…for it is not where we worship that counts, but how we worship—is our worship spiritual and real? Do we have the Holy Spirit’s help? For God is Spirit, and we must have his help to worship as we should… John 4:21-24 NLT

Concerning Justice (5:8)

Solomon says politicians or kings oppressing the poor shouldn’t surprise us. Russian author, Alekandr Solzhenitsyn said, “the line dividing good and evil passes not through states, nor between classes, nor between political parties either – but right through the human heart.

  • Exploitation filters down from official to official and there seems to be no end to it. It comes from the inherent evil that resides within us.
  • New Testament teaching – rulers are supposed to be extensions of the hand of God on earth (Romans 13:1-7; 1 Peter 2:13-17)
  • Dr. David Jeremiah offers this advice on God’s grace and governing – trust God. He is sovereign. Pray for officials. Be an excellent citizen. Take a stand for God when government defies him. Don’t expect utopia from any earthly system of government ruled by man.

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Concerning Wealth (5:10-20)

Do you find it true that whenever life goes awry the first thing we look for is a financial remedy?

Dr. David Jeremiah’s “5 things we should know about Money”

  • The more you have, the more you want (v10)
  • The more you have, the more you spend (v11)
  • The more you have, the more you worry (v12)
  • The more you have, the more you lose (v13, 14)
  • The more you have, the more you will leave behind (v14-17)

Dr. Jeremiah’s “2 Things we need to know about God” (v18-20)

  • Our ability to earn money is a gift from God. There is no such thing as a self-made man or woman. What God gives, he can take away (Job 1:21). If we see the money we have as God given, we are more likely to experience contentment and be grateful.
  • Our ability to enjoy money is a gift from God. Money and possessions aren’t evil if we don’t allow them to enslave us. Yes, we can even find enjoyment in giving some of it away.

When you die you cant take wealth with you. There is no own where God is concerned, only a loan because possessions (including money) don’t transcend eternity.

Work or Worship

IMG_0402In Benham’s book, the brothers call our attention to the Hebrew word avodah which can mean work or worship.  God put a desire in us to do both.  The Benham brothers assert that as followers of Jesus we shouldn’t make the mistake of separating the two.  They had several things to say on the subject.  Here are three:

  1.  Whatever the task at work (no matter how menial), it can be done as an act of worship to the God we serve.  That means if we’re janitors (been there) or some other low link on the corporate food chain, our work is meaningful to God.  He sees it as such.
  2. We are strategically placed by God in our jobs as ambassadors for Him.  Not only are we serving our employer (work) we are serving Him (worship).  Your job is your ministry.
  3. Our identity should come from who we are not what we do.  “We are defined by the One who holds us in His hand.”  We must be careful that we are not pulled away from God by making what we do a priority over who we are.  (Colossians 3:23-24)