Tag: Thanksgiving

The Thanksgiving of the Living

19 The living, the living, he thanks you,
    as I do this day;
the father makes known to the children
    your faithfulness. – Isaiah 38:19

The Living

Isaiah Chapter 38 records the fascinating account of King Hezekiah’s sickness and recovery. Try to put yourself in King Hezekiah’s position if you can. Lying sick, and at the point of death, the imposing figure of the Prophet Isaiah comes to pay you a visit. Always sober and dressed in his humble sackcloth, the mighty prophet gives you these “encouraging” words:

“Thus says the Lord: Set your house in order, for you shall die, you shall not recover.”

How would you respond to such a statement? Especially coming from a source like Isaiah. A prophet who received visions from God during the reign of four kings of Judah. During his forty years of ministry Isaiah prophesied on the coming Messiah, warnings and assurances for Israel and Judah, the coming Day of the Lord, and the Kingdom of God. In time, each of his prophecies would be fulfilled, thus proving their Divine source. When Isaiah spoke, the wise took his words to heart.

Hezekiah was familiar with Isaiah. Thus, the gravity of his words were unbearable. At thirty-nine years of age and childless, Hezekiah’s days among the living were numbered.

Death Sentence

As I read through the Bible, this account reminds me of my chiropractor and good friend Dr. Russell Willemin. Like Hezekiah, he was given a hopeless diagnosis that might better have been called a death sentence. Specifically, in early February of 2014, he was diagnosed with uroepithelial carcinoma in his right kidney. Although surgery was performed to remove his right kidney, ureter, and bladder cuff, the cancer had progressed to stage IV and was in the lymphatics around his aorta and was inoperable.

While he did not receive any somber words from the Prophet Isaiah, Dr. Russ did receive sobering counsel from his medical team. Certainly, the odds were not in his favor. If ever there was a time to set his house in order, it was now.

At fifty-eight years of age, with of bride of thirty-six years, three children and four grandchildren, it appeared that Dr. Russ’s days among the living were numbered.

Weeping King

Where do you turn when you are given news like King Hezekiah? For Hezekiah, his first thought in the “trial” was prayer. Isaiah records that King Hezekiah turned his face to the wall and prayed to the Lord. As he wept bitterly, Hezekiah reminded the Lord of his faithful service and his whole hearted devotion in doing good in the sight of God. And unlike the wall he was facing, God responded to Hezekiah’s prayer.

Immediately, God spoke to the Prophet Isaiah, and told him to go back to the King with the comforting words that his prayer had been heard and his tears had been seen. Because of his contrition, God promised Hezekiah an additional fifteen years of life. In addition, God promised his protection to Hezekiah and Jerusalem during that time. A promise He confirmed with a miraculous sign. The shadow would turn back on the dial, but God would not turn back on His word. While I don’t believe God changes His mind, I do think this teaches us that “there is room in God’s plans for the prayers of man” (H.C. Leupold).

With his remaining life, Hezekiah pledged to praise God. Specifically, he would thank Him for His grace and make his offspring (of which he currently had none) know of His faithfulness.

Heart Covenant

Like King Hezekiah, Dr. Russ also turned to God in prayer during his time of desperation. Instead of reminding God of his faithfulness as the King did, however, he confessed his spiritual apathy. In his own words, he wasn’t practicing his faith or praying regularly. Basically, his life was lacking spiritual conviction. But in his current condition, he decided to make a covenant “of the heart” with God. Not unlike the vow that Jacob made with God in Genesis chapter twenty eight. If God would show him mercy and allow him to recover, he in turn would do whatever God “asked” of him. Like King Hezekiah experienced so many years before, God heard his prayer, and saw his tears.

The day before he was scheduled to begin his very aggressive chemo regimen, Dr. Russ attended a healing service at the recommendation of one of his employees. Little could he know how this service would change his life. And by extension, countless others.

At the service, the audience was challenged to forgive anyone that they were harboring ill will towards. As Dr. Russ did so, the Spirit began to work on him. As the chains associated with unforgiveness began to weaken, Dr. Russ began to perspire profusely, as if the cancer were leaving his body through his pores. Once he reached the alter and was prayed over, he lost all control of his body as the Holy Spirit began to operate on the inoperable. Like a patient under anesthesia, he could not move or even open his eyes.

The Prophet Isaiah was not on the scene, so God sent the Holy Spirit to inform Dr. Russ that he was going to be healed and he would survive. But it wouldn’t be easy. Before the healing, he would have to endure some suffering (how often the same knife that heals us must first hurt us). But with newfound trust in the Great Physician, his tears of sorrow were quickly turned into tears of joy.

Death’s Threshold

Have you ever stood at the threshold of death like these two men? When death comes, even a mighty king is helpless before it’s onslaught. For King Hezekiah, it came calling at the “prime of his life” and would forever leave an indelible mark.

In the words of John Oswalt: “At the time when he least expects it, Hezekiah is confronted by the gaping maw of death. Suddenly all the years upon which he had counted for more achievements and for the enjoyment of those achievements vanish away like a vapor. How easily we human beings consider the years of our lives an inviolate possession. But that is not true. We have only today and perhaps not all of it. We are distinctly dependent creatures, and if such experiences as Hezekiah’s help us to face what that fact means for present living and eternal destiny, then they are very salutary experiences indeed.”

Hence Hezekiah would write:

15 What shall I say? For he has spoken to me,
    and he himself has done it.
I walk slowly all my years
    because of the bitterness of my soul.

16 O Lord, by these things men live,
    and in all these is the life of my spirit.
    Oh restore me to health and make me live!
17 Behold, it was for my welfare
    that I had great bitterness;
but in love you have delivered my life
    from the pit of destruction,
for you have cast all my sins
    behind your back. – Isaiah 38:15-17

Life Lessons

How can you be delivered from the threshold of death without being forever changed? I am sure Dr. Russ would agree with Hezekiah’s statement that “in all of these is the life of my spirit”. As H.C. Leupold says of such experiences, “They are the wellspring of all existence. All this is said in an effort to indicate how deep these things go and how long they last”.

Death has the ability to remove so quickly what we treat as so permanent. As we see from Hezekiah’s words, one never completely gets over the shock of being confronted with it so suddenly and intimately. We see that his praise is not only tempered by his “bitterness” but is actually enhanced by it (v. 17). There is a depth to his thanksgiving and praise that man can not manufacture without such an experience. It is a blessed thing to be reminded of our dependency on God, and perhaps nothing does it so quickly and thoroughly as a death sentence.

It is good to remember that God holds the keys to life and death. Also, it is good to be reminded that he hears the prayers of those that cry out to him. It is wise for the living to trust Him with, and thank Him for, their lives every day.

Thanksgiving

As we approach the Thanksgiving Holiday, may you ponder these words from Dr. Russ.

“I strive now to stay in His presence all day every day. I speak out His name for support all day just to bring my awareness back to Him. For that, He offers us love, support and forgiveness beyond our comprehension. He gives us the gift of another day on Earth with our loved ones. How are you going to use that gift today? How are you going to prepare to use that gift tomorrow? Don’t waste those gifts, these days. Praise Him and thank Him every day.”

When you take time to thank God today, don’t forget to thank him for Hezekiah’s son Manasseh who was born during the fifteen years that God added to Hezekiah’s life. Although Manasseh was a wicked King, he was part of the lineage of Christ (Matthew 1:10). And it is only because of Christ that the redeemed can echo the words of Hezekiah’s thanksgiving.

“but in love you have delivered my life
    from the pit of destruction,
for you have cast all my sins
    behind your back”

Happy thanksgiving, and welcome back from the dead.

But God, being rich in mercy, because of the great love with which he loved us, even when we were dead in our trespasses, made us alive together with Christ—by grace you have been saved— Ephesians 2:4-5

Rejoice Before The Lord

And there you shall eat before the Lord your God, and you shall rejoice, you and your households, in all that you undertake, in which the Lord your God has blessed you. – Deuteronomy 12:7

Thanksgiving

Today we celebrate another Thanksgiving. In the comfort of our homes we will sit with family and friends and feast. To the tune of 4500 calories per person according to one report. I don’t know how accurate the study may or may not be but most of us will eat more than we need to.

As the day passes and the conversations carry on many of us will be entertained by an early sampling of Christmas music. Certainly, some will sit in front of the television and enjoy a movie and others will allow the NFL game to give them their annual indigestion (you know who you are Lion’s fans).

For many, the day will consist of board games or card games. In between the days activities, I am confident there will be a lot of time spent on our cell phones and laptops. The day just wouldn’t be complete without checking in on the Joneses.

But before you retire and your head hits the pillow…

Rejoice

In the passage quoted above, God commands the Children of Israel, “You SHALL rejoice.”

Why?

After Israel spent 430 years of slavery in Egypt, God personally intervened on behalf of His chosen people. Helpless to escape from the bonds that held them, God sent Moses and Aaron to confront Pharaoh. Once Pharaoh’s heart was stubbornly hardened, God sent a destroyer to break him.

On the eve of their exodus, the Israelites marked their doorposts with the blood of sacrificed lambs to prevent the destroyer from entering. When it was time for their departure, God would lead them by a pillar of cloud by day and fire by night.

Destination Promised Land.

“There” you shall eat before the Lord. We may not be in the Promised Land, but wherever we are we should rejoice. Most of us will spend Thanksgiving in a comfortable home protected from the elements. We will be safe and comfortable and cozy. Our present homes may not be perfect, but we should be thankful for them.

While we are at it we should rejoice for our future homes. While we were held in bondage to sin, the blood of the Lamb was applied to the doorposts of our sin hardened hearts and the destroyer can no longer touch us. Rejoice in your future home!

You and Yours

As God commands the Children of Israel to rejoice, the command applies to them both individually and corporately, “you and your households”. God wants us to express our thankfulness before others. God’s blessings upon us our visible to others, our praise should be “shared” as well.

As you sit down to “eat before the Lord” take a good look at the faces around the table. They are just a sampling of the many blessings that God has bestowed upon you. Grandparents, parents, siblings, children, grandchildren, nephews, nieces, aunts, uncles, cousins, unrelated friends, etc. How many relationships have molded you into the person you are today?

Thank God for the people He has brought into your life. Rejoice with those you spend time with. Thank those who have invested in you and encouraged you. There is no guarantee that some of those chairs might not be empty next year.

Someday we will stand before the throne of God rejoicing with people from every tribe and tongue. This Thanksgiving may you recognize the blessings of “you and yours.”

Undertake

Why should I thank God for what I have done? How many times have you heard this or a similar question? Yet God tells us to rejoice in all that “we” undertake. After all, without God, what could we do?

Who gives us life? Who gives us health? Where does the breathe in our lungs come from? How about the heat of the sun? The food we eat? The water we drink? Why do we deceive ourselves? The only reason “we” can “do” anything is because of the grace of God. The only reason “we” exist is because of the grace of God.

Take time to thank God for your health. Thank Him for your employment. Thank Him for your talents and abilities. Reflect on all you have accomplished and thank Him for enabling you to do so. God not only enables us to labor, but then He blesses our labor. Isn’t that what that feast before you represents?

Rejoice in all that you undertake. It is a constant reminder of the grace of God.

Blessings

As you eat before the Lord this Thanksgiving, consuming your 4500 calories, don’t forget to thank God for His unlimited blessings. He has blessed you beyond measure and desires and deserves your praises.

As Proverbs 10:22 reminds us, it is the blessings of the Lord that makes us rich. Maybe not always in the material realm, but certainly in the spiritual. Richer than we can ever realize. Certainly rich enough to rejoice forever.

We might be wise to turn off the football game for a few minutes (spoiler alert: the Lions are going to lose) and listen to Matt Redman’s song 10000 Reasons (Bless The Lord). If his heart can find 10000 reasons to sing about the goodness of God, certainly our hearts can find 10000 reasons to rejoice in His blessings. And no, you can’t count each calorie as one reason.

Happy Thanksgiving!!

10000 Reasons

Bless the Lord oh my soul
Oh my soul
Worship His Holy name
Sing like never before
Oh my soul
I’ll worship Your Holy name

The sun comes up
It’s a new day dawning
It’s time to sing Your song again
Whatever may pass
And whatever lies before me
Let me be singing
When the evening comes

Bless the Lord oh my soul
Oh my soul
Worship His Holy name
Sing like never before
Oh my soul
I’ll worship Your Holy name

You’re rich in love
And You’re slow to anger
Your name is great
And Your heart is kind
For all Your goodness
I will keep on singing
Ten thousand reasons
For my heart to find

Bless the Lord oh my soul
Oh my soul
Worship His Holy name
Sing like never before
Oh my soul
I’ll worship Your Holy name
Bless You Lord

And on that day
When my strength is failing
The end draws near
And my time has come
Still my soul will
Sing Your praise unending
Ten thousand years
And then forevermore
Forevermore

Bless the Lord oh my soul
Oh my soul
Worship His Holy name
Sing like never before
Oh my soul
I’ll worship Your Holy name

Bless the Lord oh my soul
Oh my soul
Worship His Holy name
Sing like never before
Oh my soul
I’ll worship Your Holy name
Yes I’ll worship Your Holy name
I’ll worship Your Holy name

Sing like never before
Oh my soul
I’ll worship Your Holy name
Jesus I will worship Your Holy name
Worship Your Holy name

Thanksgiving

Enter his gates with thanksgiving,
    and his courts with praise!
    Give thanks to him; bless his name! – Psalm 100:4

Be Thankful

I woke up at 4:00 this morning and panicked.  Today is Thanksgiving day and I am not prepared.  I knew it was coming.  It’s on the calendar.  My employer gave me a box of food.  I have the day off work.  The island in the kitchen is covered with pies and cookies.  Tables and chairs are all taken care of.  So what is there left to do?  Be thankful.

No Shortage

Is it only me, or are most of us in our society “spoiled”?  Christ tells us to pray for our daily bread, but do we do it in faith and gratitude when we have a refrigerator and multiple freezers full of food?  Daily bread?  We’re stockpiled for a zombie apocalypse.  No shortage of bread here.

My closet is in competition with my freezers.  It is crammed with clothes.  If I can’t decide what to wear it is because of excess, not lack.  The only shortage in the closet is hangers and hooks.  No shortage of clothes.

How about shelter?  Most of us have plenty of room to spare.  If necessary, we could accommodate upwards of fifty people in our homes.  They wouldn’t all have a cozy bed but we could keep them warm and dry in a crisis.  And that is only our residence.  How about that cottage or second home?  No shortage of housing.

How about transportation?  I remember when most families had one car.  If you had two, you were wealthy.  Now, it seems there are more cars in the driveway than drivers in the house.  We are a society on the go and our plethora of autos reflects such.  Like our clothes, our dilemma is which auto to drive today.  No shortage of transportation.

How about Bibles?  We’ve got them in King James, New King James, New American Standard, NIV, and ESV.  Those are only the translations, how about the niche bibles?  Bibles for students, teens, grandparents, etc.  I’m having a hard time locating my bible for CPA’s with blue eyes, but I know it is around here somewhere.  If I can’t locate it soon, I’ll just order the bible for blind CPA’s over 50 years old.  No shortage of Bibles.

Excess Danger

Why do I talk about excess on Thanksgiving?  For the obvious reason, that excess can rob us of our thankfulness.  If our excess doesn’t, our greed will.  Let’s face it, we struggle with both.  Thanksgiving has evolved from a special day set aside to recognize our dependence upon God, to a speed bump on the road to Christmas, to an afterthought, steamrolled by the new “spirit” of Christmas.  As if we don’t already have enough possessions, Black Friday “begins” well before we prepare our Thanksgiving meals.

See why I woke up in a panic?  We need to look in our mirrors.  Are we truly thankful?  I am not saying that having material things is wrong, but ingratitude is.  Excess and thankfulness are not mutually exclusive, but they aren’t exactly Siamese twins.  It takes a mature Christian, and I personally have not yet arrived.  I’m spoiled, but at least I recognize it.  Which means, there is hope.

Simplify & Share

I have resolved to simplify my life.  The guns I haven’t shot for years are going.  Same with the clothes I haven’t worn since who knows when.  As I have thought about this issue, I have come to the conclusion that it is better to share my excess, when possible, rather than giving it away.  When I share my possessions, I share myself as well.  I know this is a wise plan because it is what God has done with His wealth.

When God looks at us, he sees lack, not excess.  Spiritual zombies walking in darkness totally unable to save ourselves.  God did not send a legion of angels to save us, rather He came and shared in our flesh and blood (Hebrews 2:14).  He gave of Himself.  He didn’t just reach down, He reached out.  He shared in our flesh and blood, so we could share in His divine nature (2 Peter 1:4).

Excess In Christ

Want to talk about excess?  God has given us the body of Christ as our bread and wine.  Through faith in His sacrifice, we will never have an unsatiated spiritual hunger or thirst.  We will have food to nourish us that the world doesn’t comprehend.

As children of God, we have been clothed with the Righteousness of Christ.  According to Colossians chapter three, our closet now contains clothes of compassion, kindness, humility, gentleness, and patience.

As children of God, Christ has promised us a heavenly dwelling.  In fact, He is preparing it for us right now.  Until He calls us home, He has turned our hearts into temples and taken up residence in us.

As children of God, we have been transported into the Heavenly places with Christ.  We have been blessed with every spiritual blessing in the Heavenly places (Ephesians 1:3)!!   As citizens of Heaven, we can now store our treasures there where they will await our arrival.  Never will they be subject to decay.

As children of God, our fellowship is with the incarnate Word.  Obviously, He speaks to us through His written Word, but with the Holy Spirit indwelling us, we now have the ability to understand any translation of the Bible and have the Word speak to our souls and not just our minds.

Thanksgiving Reminders

Don’t let your material excess blind you of your spiritual wealth.  God has blessed you beyond comprehension.  He loves you with an everlasting love.  His mercies are new every morning.  When you were dead in your sins, He offered you eternal life.  The list is endless.  James tells us that every good gift and every perfect gift is from above, coming down from God, Himself (James 1:17).

This Thanksgiving may your material excess remind you of your spiritual blessings.  Might your Thanksgiving cornucopia proclaim the generosity of God.  I challenge you to look for someone to share your blessings and by extension, yourself with.  Use your blessings to bless others.  More importantly, take time to come into God’s presence with a thankful heart and praise on your lips.  He didn’t save you from being a spiritual zombie to see you become an ungrateful child.  As the Psalmist says, we are to thank Him and praise His name.

Thanksgiving day is just another reminder.

18 give thanks in all circumstances; for this is the will of God in Christ Jesus for you. – 1 Thessalonians 5:18