Thanksgiving Day is a very special day of celebration in the
USA. It is one of the holidays that is
celebrated by the majority of people.
Many make a special effort to be home for Thanksgiving and the Sunday
after Thanksgiving is the busiest day of the year for the airlines as people
return home.
The origin of the celebration goes back to the early 1600
when the Pilgrims came to America seeking religious freedom. They were originally from England but had fled
to Holland where they thought they would be able to live out their Christian
faith. They became disenchanted with the
lifestyle of the people and hired a ship to take them to America where they
settled in the NE part of the country.
The first year was a very difficult year as half of the 102 people who
came died from various causes. The local
Indians led by Squanto, who spoke English after having lived in England came to
their rescue and taught the pilgrims how to plant different crops to help them
supply food and survive. The summer after their arrival they had a bountiful
harvest and to celebrate they had a 3 day feast. They invited the family of Squanto to attend
the celebration but were not prepared for the 91 people who came with him. The Indians brought much of the food and
shared in the celebration.
Thanksgiving was not established as a legal holiday until
President Abraham Lincoln in the 1863.
It is now always celebrated on the 4th Thursday of November of each
year.
As followers of Christ we have much to be thankful for each
day. God is our Source and without His
intervention in our lives we would not be able to enjoy the life he has
provided for us. From the very beginning of the creation of the world and the human race we understand the goodness of God and his desire for mankind to receive his generous provisions for life. When we think about the
Garden of Eden we understand that God is a God of beauty, order and abundance.
Adam and Eve were in
paradise, a place of what must have been intense beauty with all the plants and
animals around them. We serve a creative
God who delights in making things beautiful for us to enjoy. God has placed us in a beautiful country of
Guatemala where we can enjoy the awesome landscapes all around us.
God is also a God of order.
He has established the laws of nature and has ordered the universe in a
miraculous way. Of all the planets he
created on the earth is in the exact location in the universe where life can
exist. We have a movie called, "The Privileged Planet" and another
called the "God of Wonders" that are fascinating to watch as they
describe the beauty and order of the universe.
He is not a God of chaos, he does all things well and we are able to
enjoy the order he has established.
God is also a God of abundance. Adam and Eve lacked nothing in the garden,
there was more than they needed because God is a God of abundance and it was
his desire for them to multiply and fill the earth. With God there will always be enough. When Jesus fed the multitudes there was
always more than what was needed. We can
count on his generosity to meet our needs and supply us with more than we need
to enable us to share with others.
I am thankful that we serve a God who delights in beauty,
order and abundance.
Thanksgiving Day is a time for us to remember the blessings
we have received materially, physically and spiritually.
Materially, God has promised to supply for all our needs
according to his riches in Christ Jesus.
I have been paid in full and have more than enough; I am
fully satisfied, now that I have received from Epaphroditus the gifts you sent,
a fragrant offering, a sacrifice acceptable and pleasing to God. And my God
will fully satisfy every need of yours according to his riches in glory in
Christ Jesus (Php 4:18–19).
There may be times when we are challenged but God is
faithful and He will provide for our material needs. I have witnessed and experienced the
generosity of God in my life on many occasions. God has always supplied work
for me, finances to sustain me on the mission field and material things I need
to be able to do the work he has given me.
I have been well taken care of by God and he has used many people and
churches to help supply for my needs and Susy's.
God also takes care of our physical needs. He gives us life and sustains our lives with
good health and the food we need. He
does not want us to worry about the basic things we need: food, drink or
clothing. He knows what we need and will
supply for it if we seek His Kingdom first.
“Therefore I tell you, do not worry about your life, what
you will eat or what you will drink, or about your body, what you will wear. Is
not life more than food, and the body more than clothing? (Mt 6:25).
Our physical health is a gift from God. We have to do our
part to stay healthy but ultimately we have to depend on God to give us life
each day and protect us from the effects of a fallen world that can take away
our lives very quickly or bring changes that will make life difficult. God is our Healer and He responds to the cry
of His children in their time of need.
Our spiritual needs have been provided for through the gift
of Jesus. We through Jesus have
everything we need that pertains to life and godliness.
2 May grace and peace be multiplied to you in the
knowledge of God and of Jesus our Lord, 3 because his divine power has
bestowed on us all things that are necessary for life and godliness, through
the knowledge of the one who called us by his own glory and excellence of
character, (2 Pe 1:2–4).
Christ has
reconciled us to God and given us the privilege of being sons and daughters of
God. We are now part of his family and
have been accepted and made righteous through Jesus. God has placed us in the church, the body of
believers where we can grow in our understanding of Him and learn how to live
in community with each other.
We are blessed to be able to meet in peace to be able to
study the Word of God and be able to share it with each other. We do not have to meet in secret as many do
in countries where Christians are persecuted. Freedom to read the Bible at times comes with as price and the story of Corrie Ten Boom is one example.
Corrie Ten Boom and her sister were imprisoned in a Nazi
concentration camp during WWII. They had
been hiding Jews in their home in Holland but were caught and sent to the
concentration camp in Ravensbruck.
The barracks where Corrie ten Boom and her sister Betsy
were kept in the Nazi concentration camp Ravensbruck were terribly overcrowded
and flea-infested.
They had been able to miraculously smuggle a Bible
into the camp, and in that Bible they had read that in all things there were to
give thanks, and that God can use anything for good.
Corrie’s sister Betsy decided that this meant
thanking God for the fleas.
This was too much for Corrie, who said she could do
no such thing. Betsy insisted, so Corrie gave in and prayed to God,
thanking Him even for the fleas.
Over the next several months a wonderful, but
curious, thing happened. They found that the guards never entered their
barracks. This meant that women were not assaulted. It also meant
that they were able to do the unthinkable, which was to hold open Bible studies
and prayer meetings in the heart of a Nazi concentration camp.
Through this, countless numbers of women came to
faith in Christ.
Only at the end did they discover why the guards had
left them alone and would not enter into their barracks.
It was because of the fleas.
I am thankful to God
for the diversity of the body of believers and how each one is unique and
important in their function in the body.
We are united in Christ and we need each other. Our spiritual gifts are designed to
complement each other and we must truly appreciate the gifting God has given to
each one of us.
We are not to think to highly of ourselves but humble
ourselves and see ourselves as we really are and see others from God's
perspective.
For by the grace given to me I say to everyone among you
not to think of yourself more highly than you ought to think, but to think with
sober judgment, each according to the measure of faith that God has assigned.
Rom 12.3
If we view someone as better than us we often envy what
they have.
If we view someone as equal to us we find ourselves in
competition with them.
If we view someone as less than us then we struggle with
pride and condemnation of them.
It is important that we appreciate each other but also just
as important to acknowledge it verbally.
It is easy for us to become so involved in the ministries we are doing
that we forget to take the time to show appreciation and give thanks for the
people who work with us and make our ministry possible.
Paul in his letters to the churches often gave thanks for
the people who helped him in the ministry. Romans 15 contains a list of people
whom he wanted to acknowledge.
Phoebe: for she has been a benefactor of many and of myself
as well.
Prisca Aquila: who risked their necks for my life
Mary: who has worked very hard among you
Andronicus and Junia: my relatives who were in prison with
me
Ampliatus, my beloved in the Lord
Urbanus, our co-worker in Christ
Apelles, who is approved in Christ.
Persis, who has worked hard in the Lord.
Rufus, chosen in the Lord; and greet his mother—a mother to
me also.
Paul understood that he needed others to help him in the
ministry and made an effort to thank them.
May we never take each other for granted and be so consumed with our
work that we forget to thank the people who are helping us.
I want to close with a story I read about Thomas Carlyle a
Scottish essayist and historian. John Ortberg in his book, "When its all over it all goes back in the box" recounts this story.
Carlyle
married his secretary Jane Welsh. She
was highly intelligent and attractive and served as Carlyle’s secretary. Jane became ill and Thomas did not seem to
pay much attention to her ill health but constantly was absorbed in his
work. Jane had cancer and eventually she
was confined to her bed. Even though
Carlyle loved her he did not have much time to stay with her or give her much
attention.
After several years Jane died. On the day of her burial, he
returned to his house that was suddenly shatteringly empty. He went upstairs to her room and sat in the
chair next to her bed. He noticed her
diary lying on the table next to her bed.
He picked it up and began to read.
On one entire page she had written a single line: “Yesterday he spent an
hour with me and it was like heaven; I love him so.”
Carlyle suddenly realized that he had been too busy to
notice how much he meant to Jane. He
thought of all the times head had been preoccupied with his work and simply
failed to notice her. He had not seen
her suffering. He had not seen her love.
Thomas turned the page of Jane’s diary. He read the words that would break his heart,
that he could never forget: “I have listened all day to hear his steps in the
hall, but now it is late and I guess he won’t come today.”
He read a little more in her book and then put it back on
the table and ran out the house. Friends
finally found him back at the churchyard kneeling in the earth at the side of
her grave, covered with mud. His eyes
were red from weeping; tears were rolling down his face. “If only I had known, if only I had known.”
He cried.
After Jane’s death, Carlyle made little attempt to write
again. The historian lived another
fifteen years but said he lived them “weary, bored, and a partial recluse.
Do you appreciate the people God has placed in your life
and are you giving them the time and attention they need? Do you see them as instruments in God’s hands
to be a blessing to your life? Are you
thankful for each person God has given to you and have you expressed your
gratitude to them?
This Thanksgiving let's be people who express our gratitude
to God for his beauty, order and abundance that we experience in our lives each
day. Let’s be thankful for his loving
care we experience through meeting our material, physical and spiritual
needs. May we be especially thankful for
the Body of Christ and the importance of each person God has placed in the
church, acknowledging their gifts and expressing appreciation to them.
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