Thankfulness After Thanksgiving
For one month out of the year most Americans are contemplating all that is good every single day. You see it most vividly via social media as people post what they are most thankful for each day. It is November, the month of Thanksgiving. But what happens in December or even further down the road when the month of remembering to be thankful is but a distant memory. God’s word doesn’t designate a month for thanksgiving, but a lifetime.
Paul, exhorting the Thessalonians says, “Rejoice always, pray without ceasing, give thanks in all circumstances; for this is the will of God in Christ Jesus for you” (1 Thess. 5: 16-18). Paul was a man who knew suffering. He wasn’t exhorting them to be giddy and fake in all situations. Rather Paul is referring to a thanksgiving rooted in the understanding that God is good and sent his son to die for us and works all things together for the good of those who love him (Rom. 8:28). One mark of the Christian is joy and thanksgiving (Eph. 5:4). This is a command for how we should live. So how does this look in my own life?
Because I have sin crouching at the door ready to take over at any moment, I have to fight to be thankful. I do not have to be experiencing difficult circumstances for this fight to arise. All I need to do is wake up. I awake and immediately I have a choice to rejoice or complain. But by God’s grace, when the fog clears from my eyes, I am able to rejoice and be thankful daily. Thanksgiving, the act of being thankful, is a discipline. I must train my mind and eyes to see the Lord’s goodness and sweet grace daily. He is faithful to reveal himself as I ask.
Although I believe that we are to be thankful for all of life, I am grateful for a month where thankfulness is on display every day. For me, the Thanksgiving holiday is a reminder that I am saved by the blood of Christ, he fully paid my ransom, I do not need to fear my final day, and one day I will be with my Savior rejoicing forevermore. Thanksgiving gives me an opportunity to get a glimpse of that rejoicing now.
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This past week I joined five storytellers in Rwanda to meet the incredible men and women served by HOPE International and capture stories. The stories are wonderfully encouraging but their lives were a lesson to me. On Tuesday, we drove out with another organization (Aziza Life) to learn from women of the Abumurvava Village, which means “The Courageous People” and experience the typical lifestyle of a woman in the countryside. As we drove out to this village and as I interacted with the women, I couldn’t get Proverbs 31, the famous Hebrews poem, out of my head.