Thursday, November 27, 2008

Do You Give Thanks to the Glory of God?

"True gratitude or thankfulness to God for his kindness to us, arises from a foundation laid before, of love to God for what he is in himself; whereas a natural gratitude has no such antecedent foundation. The gracious stirrings of grateful affection to God, for kindness received, always are from a stock of love already in the heart, established in the first place on other grounds, God's own excellency."1

You might hear many people giving thanks to God, but for what reason? Perhaps people thank God for the death of Jesus Christ on the cross because to them it shows God makes much of them. Sadly enough, I think this is all too often the case. Simply put, we often give thanks to God with wrong motives. Like Jonathan Edwards says, we need not give thanks or gratitude to God because of something he has done for us for that is rooted in self-love. I.E. being enamored with the gifts rather than the giver. In fact, we need to give gratitude to God for who He is in Himself, in His character, in His excellency. That is how we fulfill 1Cor. 10:31 in giving thanks to God to the glory of God. If we fail to give thanks this way, then we are simply reverting back to the way unsaved people give thanks, namely in a self-love manner.

Listen to what James 4:3-4 says:
"3 You ask and do not receive, because you ask wrongly, to spend it on your passions. 4 You adulterous people! Do you not know that friendship with the world is enmity with God? Therefore whoever wishes to be a friend of the world makes himself an enemy of God."

Many of us are like this toward our Lord. We are like a wife who asks her husband to fund her adulterous affairs and passions. The problem is not our asking nor is it our thanking. The problem lies in our motive of thanking and asking.

I think we can take several things away from this lesson.

1. Do you even thank God?
2. Are your motives of thanking God rooted in self-love or in God's excellency?
3. Will you endeavor to purely thank God and have God centered gratitude?
3. We need to check our motives to see if they are self-oriented or God's glory oriented.

May you all have a wonderful day of thanksgiving rooted in pure grattitude to God and others.

God bless,
Michael.




1. Jonathan Edwards. Religious Affections, The Works of Jonathan Edwards, Vol. 2, New Haven: Yale University Press, 1959, orig. 1746, p.247.

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Sunday School Highlights

This past Sunday we continued our journey through the book of Deuteronomy. We began to explore the first section of the book's summary statement 'God chooses His people, His people must choose Him.' Therefore, we studied the first aspect of how God chose the Israelites as His special people. It wasn't because of their righteousness but out of His love for them. Remember what kind of people they were? They were insignificant to the world, they were slaves turned vagabonds wondering in the desert. They were small and stiff-necked. All more the reason for God to turn from them, but no. He embraced them with love and showered them with grace. Just think of our own salvation. Each one of us has a past, has a history, has string of issues that follow us each day. That past tells us that we are like the Israelites, undeserving of the Lord's grace and love. Just take some time and meditate upon these verses, Eph. 1:3-4. What comes to your mind?