THE ATTITUDE OF GRATITUDE

#103                                                        THE ATTITUDE OF GRATITUDE                                                                               

Scripture              Jeremiah 2:5-13 NIV                                                                                        Orig. 11/22/64 (11/78)

                                Deuteronomy 1:10-11, 21 NIV                                                                                    Rewr. 11/22/86 

Passage:

Jeremiah 2:5-13

This is what the Lord says:

“What fault did your ancestors find in me,
    that they strayed so far from me?
They followed worthless idols
    and became worthless themselves.
They did not ask, ‘Where is the Lord,
    who brought us up out of Egypt
and led us through the barren wilderness,
    through a land of deserts and ravines,
a land of drought and utter darkness,
    a land where no one travels and no one lives?’
I brought you into a fertile land
    to eat its fruit and rich produce.
But you came and defiled my land
    and made my inheritance detestable.
The priests did not ask,
    ‘Where is the Lord?’
Those who deal with the law did not know me;
    the leaders rebelled against me.
The prophets prophesied by Baal,
    following worthless idols.

“Therefore I bring charges against you again,”
declares the Lord.
    “And I will bring charges against your children’s children.
10 Cross over to the coasts of Cyprus and look,
    send to Kedar[a] and observe closely;
    see if there has ever been anything like this:
11 Has a nation ever changed its gods?
    (Yet they are not gods at all.)
But my people have exchanged their glorious God
    for worthless idols.
12 Be appalled at this, you heavens,
    and shudder with great horror,”
declares the Lord.
13 “My people have committed two sins:
They have forsaken me,
    the spring of living water,
and have dug their own cisterns,
    broken cisterns that cannot hold water.

Deuteronomy 1:10-11, 21

10 The Lord your God has increased your numbers so that today you are as numerous as the stars in the sky. 11 May the Lord, the God of your ancestors, increase you a thousand times and bless you as he has promised! 

 21 See, the Lord your God has given you the land. Go up and take possession of it as the Lord, the God of your ancestors, told you. Do not be afraid; do not be discouraged.

Purpose:  To call my people to remembrance of blessings of God to His people and that their spiritual prosperity was linked to their obedience

Keywords:          God’s Blessing                   Promises             Hebrew History                 Promises            

                                Thanksgiving                      Thankfulness

Introduction

                The attitude of gratitude is not borne easily.  Not only is its existence a troubled one, bearing it can sometimes be a struggle to those near at hand.

                Anonymity claims the  pen which wrote the verse:

                “Be thankful every day for bread;

                                For clothes and shelter, clean and warm;

                And God’s protection in life’s storm;

                For life and health, and those who care;

                                For peace and quiet, and love and prayer.”

                But in its lines is “the attitude of gratitude.” Without such, there is little to life’s meaning.  There is no maturity, no personhood; certainly, no discipleship.

                Bishop William Quayle, upon hearing of the death of his friend, the naturalist John Burroughs, reflected aloud, “Poor John, he loved the garden, but he never met the gardener.”

                Joyce Kilmer, on the other hand, was unapologetically a believer.  Before he died on a battlefield in France at the age of 32, he wrote,

                “Thank God for the bitter and ceaseless strife

                                And the sting of His chastening rod.

                Thank God for the stress and pains of life

                                And, Oh, thank God for God.”

                The Hebrew people to whom Jeremiah spoke, and around whom Deuteronomy was written, shared a heritage of blessing in the promises of God.  A part of that observance was the Feast of Tabernacles. They knew this celebration as “Sukkot,” and shared together in this feast at the end of the harvest season.  The purpose was to give thankfulness to God for the fulfillment of all His promised blessings to them.  But their history, like ours today, is checkered with those occasions of great blessing, with little or no response from those to whom the blessings are given.

I.             The Attitude of Gratitude Examines the Record from the Past.  Jeremiah 2:7, “I brought you into a plentiful country to eat the fruit thereof and the goodness thereof.”  So the Lord is the key to time and circumstance.  Dr. Sidlow Baxter teaches an important lesson in the lives of the seven great men of Genesis.  Abel was 1st, not a man reaching in toward himself as was Cain, but reaching out to the unknown: to God. 2nd was Enoch, immortalized forever as the man who walked with God.  3rd was Noah, forever the man of spiritual renewal; he followed his God over the cold water to a new day of hope.  4th was Abraham; he was a man who walked by faith, was “accounted as righteous” and called “the friend of God.” 5th, a little later, came Isaac; from him we get our first taste of  sonship; he was of special promise, of special birth, almost a sacrifice for sin. Then, 6th, came Jacob; in him was the life of service—busy, untiring, blessing, a prince at prayer. Finally, 7th, came Joseph, a life thrown away, but picked up again, blessed and used. 

                It is not such men that we need today, but people with such a grasp of God, committed to pray, promise, and perform. 

                It was in some similar way that God moved to bring America to the forefront of nations.  The year was not 1492, by the way, nor was the man Columbus.  The year was 1455, and the man was Gutenberg.  If you do not recognize the name, he was a printer.  Printing came alive, the equivalent of the computer.  The Bible, and its vision of men and women in freedom, was only a step away. 

                It was not long before doctrinal integrity replaced Ecclesiastical hierarchy (1517) in Luther’s 95 Theses at Wittenberg.  During that same period. The persecution of Separatists, your spiritual forebears, pointed believers toward a distant wilderness and freedom’s dream.

                God’s concern in America today is not in a land, but in a vision; not in a political entity, but a people.  Isaiah 1:18 “Though your sins be as scarlet they shall be as white as snow; though they be red like crimson, they shall become as wool.”  Colossians 2:2, “God’s secret . . . is Christ himself.  He is the key that opens all the hidden  treasures of God’s wisdom and knowledge.

II.            The Attitude of Gratitude Considers Performance of God’s Dealings with His People.  Deuteronomy 1:10 “The Lord your God hath multiplied  you and behold, you are this day as the stars of heaven for multitude.”   The good gifts of God to Israel were a stewardship trust. 

They were gifts clearly from God.  The Ark of the Covenant symbolized God’s presence. 2 Chronicles 7:14: "If my people, which are called by my name, shall humble themselves, and pray, and seek my face, and turn from their wicked ways; then will I hear from heaven, and will forgive their sin, and will heal their land."  We abuse holy things.

                They were gifts centered for service.  Deuteronomy 26:5, “My father was a homeless Aramean who went down into Egypt with a small company, and lived there until they became a great nation.”  It was clearly their responsibility to use those gifts to the glory of God.  To examine Israel during those years of glory is to be aware of the awe in which others held them.  In the world of nations between 10th-8th Centuries BC, they were the rich kid on the block.  Others were jealous, but could do nothing.  Then it was discovered that the mansion of Israel         had roaches and termites just like the shacks by the river.  They had been given a chance to help others.  Their greatest failing was that they did not.  What will our greatest failing be?

                You see, the truth of moral and spiritual responsibility is eternal.  To know God is to be morally and materially responsible for sharing that knowledge persuasively.  Isaiah 62:6 “I have set watchmen upon the walls, O Jerusalem, which shall never hold their peace, day or night . . . .  Give Him no rest till He establishes, till He makes Jerusalem a praise in the earth.”

                Not to share that responsibility is soul damning.  Philippians 2:13, “For it is God which worketh in you, in the midst of a crooked and perverse nation, among whom ye shine as lights in the world.”

                “O Zion haste, thy mission high fulfilling, to tell to all the world that God is light,

                That He who made all nations is not willing one soul  should perish, lost in shades of night.

                Proclaim to every people, tongue, and nation that God in whom they live and move is love.

                Tell how He stooped to save His lost creation, and died on earth that man might live above.”

III.           The Attitude of Gratitude Speaks Also of Promises in Prospect.  Deuteronomy 1:11 “[May] the Lord God of your fathers make you a thousand times so many more as you are, and bless you, as He has promised you.”   

                Let us remember that God is righteous, and our sin is a burden to Him. The world was created and ordered under His perfect hand.  It awaits people of faith and dedication to open the chalices of promise.

                About ¾ century ago Albert Einstein stood before colleagues and wrote an equation that has literally changed the world.  E = MC2.  Energy is proportional to mass.  And the atomic age came into being.  Will it always bode evil and war?  Can it not also bring good?

                The fulfilled promise is one in which sin is brought to light in Christ.

                It is the eternal link of blood.  Leviticus 17:11 “For it is the blood that maketh an atonement for the soul.”  Hebrews 9:22 “Without the shedding of blood is no remission.”

                It is the building blocks to the universe.  Isaiah 28:16 “Therefore, thus saith the Lord God, Behold, I lay in Zion, for a foundation, a stone, a precious cornerstone, a sure foundation.”

                God’s promise is first an invitation.  Matthew 11:28, “Come unto me, all ye who labor.”  I Peter 2:9, ‘Ye are a chosen generation called . . . out of darkness into His marvelous light.”  Revelations 22:17 “Whosoever will, let him take of the water of life freely.”

Conclusion

                The early charters of the colonies that became the United States were treatises dedicated to God through His Son.  Plymouth, Delaware, Massachusetts Bay, Maryland, Rhode Island had the stated purpose, “to advance the enlargement of the Christian religion, to the glory of God almighty.”

                The closing words of the Declaration of Independence confessed the nation’s dependence.  Congress appointed a day of humiliation, fasting, and prayer in 1776, that the colonies, “through the merits and mediation of Jesus Christ, obtain His pardon and forgiveness.”  Congress ordered the first Thanksgiving in 1777 asking “the penitent confession of their manifold sins . . . and their  humble earnest supplication, that it may please God, through the merits of Jesus Christ, mercifully to blot out our sins of remembrance.”

Abbreviated version of #103

                When you hear today of someone with “an attitude,” it usually has a negative connotation.  However, if I understand the word aright, it can be used positively as well.  Just as we are able to express strong negative emotions, we are also able to express powerful positive emotions.  It is in that sense that I speak to you this morning on “The Attitude of Gratitude.”

                Anonymity claims the pen which wrote the verse:

                “Be thankful every day for bread,

                                For clothes and shelter, clean and warm;

                And God’s protection in life’s storm.

                                For life and health, and those  who care,

                For peace and quiet, and love and prayer.”

                Such lines as these contain that “attitude of gratitude.”  Without such, life’s meaning is extremely the more complicated.  Bishop William Quayle,  upon hearing of the death of his friend, the world-renowned naturalist, John Burroughs, reflected aloud, “Poor John, he loved the garden but never knew the gardener.”

                Joyce Kilmer, on the other hand, was unapologetically a believer.  Before dying on a battlefield in France at the age of 32, he wrote:

                “Thank God for the bitter and ceaseless strife

                                And the sting of His chastening rod.

                Thank God for the stress and pains of life

                                And, Oh, thank God for God.”    

                The Hebrew people, who were Jeremiah’s audience, and the subject about which Deuteronomy was written, shared a heritage not unlike our Thanksgiving heritage.  It was a celebration called ‘Sukkot.”  It came at the end of the harvest season, and was intended as an expression of thankfulness.  But their history, like ours today, is checkered with manifold evidence of blessing, and little more than token response from those to whom the blessings are given.  The “attitude of gratitude” must examine Past Perceptions, Present Performances, and Promises in Prospect.

                The early charters of the colonies that became the United States were treatises dedicated to God through His Son.  Plymouth, Delaware, Massachusetts Bay, Maryland, Rhode Island had the stated purpose, “to advance the enlargement of the Christian religion, to the glory of God almighty.”

                The closing words of the Declaration of Independence confessed the nation’s dependence.  Congress appointed a day of humiliation, fasting, and prayer in 1776, that the colonies, “through the merits and mediation of Jesus Christ, obtain His pardon and forgiveness.”  Congress ordered the first Thanksgiving in 1777 asking “the penitent confession of their manifold sins . . . and their  humble earnest supplication, that it may please God, through the merits of Jesus Christ, mercifully to blot out our sins of remembrance.”

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WHEN GOOD THINGS COME OUR WAY

#073                                               WHEN GOOD THINGS COME OUR WAY                                                                      

Scripture  Psalm 84:11 NIV                                                                                                        Orig. November 24. 1963

                                                                                                                                                           Rewr. November 17, 1984 

Passage: 

For the Lord God is a sun and shield;
    the Lord bestows favor and honor;
no good thing does he withhold
    from those whose walk is blameless.

Purpose: On the Sunday before Thanksgiving, to remind my people of the great goodness of God to His people.

Keywords:          God                       Goodness           Special Days

Timeline/Series:               Thanksgiving     

Introduction

                Have you ever reasoned within yourself to see what it is that you really expect from God?  Do we seriously expect God to bless us with wealth when so much of the world’s people go hungry?

                I could not help but notice the disparity this week.  U.S.A. Today featured an article on hunger in Africa.  “Americans who have been to Ethiopia remember the silent children . . . . or women gathering grass for their families’ meals. Or children with bloated bellies tugging at the arms of visitors or lying on the road to stop food trucks.”

                The disparity came a day or so later while reading an article in Newsweek.  The article was entitled “America’s Nutrition Revolution.”  It described a beautifully appointed salad bar.  “No,” said the article, “it isn’t Malibu.  It’s the Greyhound Bus Station in Chicago, hog butcher for the world.”

                It’s great to have a choice.  It is greater still to know about nutrition, and to be able to eat accordingly.

                Ethiopia and half of Africa is in what some call the worst famine of the 20th Century, and most Americans are more concerned about higher standards of living, better roads, less taxes, bigger amusement parks, and how to best invest our money.

                Now what was that question again?  Do we seriously expect God to bless us with wealth when so much of the world’s people go hungry?”

I.             Good Comes from the Vision of God for His People.   The text boldly proclaims “No good thing” asserting that good does not come by accident.  Psalms 23:6 “Surely goodness and mercy shall follow me all the days of my life.”  Romans 12:9 “Abhor that which is evil, cleave to that which is good.”  I Thessalonians 5:21 “Prove all things; hold fast that which is good.”

                It is God’s nature to abhor evil, cleave to good, so it is expected of you and me.  Thus, in those good things that we receive, we are to perceive them as His gifts of love to us.  We are to be very careful that we not perceive only that which is materially advantageous as good.

                One Sunday morning in New Orleans, the paper told a large story between the lines.  Tulane won when Vandy failed to score from the one yard line in the last minutes of the game.  The winning coach was quoted as saying “Just the grace of God.”

                There is one all-encompassing guideline by which God determines the “good thing” which He will not withhold.  Philippians 4:19 “My God shall supply all your need according to His riches in glory by Jesus Christ.”  What we receive is from the supply of his divine economy.  Since He has other children, we are “joint heirs” to His riches in glory.”  His promise is to “supply all your need.”  Anything that you have that you do not need, you decide where it came from.

II.            Good Comes from the Involvement of God with His People.  “No good thing will the Lord withhold from them . . . .”  In our pseudo-sophistication, either out of church or in church, many people have discounted God.  What Paul wrote to the Romans in 1:22, what some will miss in tonight’s message: “Professing themselves to be wise, they became fools.” 

                To discount God is to discount Him to our doom and to our perversion.  Ethiopia is a case in point.  They have been in the eastern bloc.  Russia could supply them with arms; not with grain.  Russia can’t feed her own.  At the same time, America, with stored grain to stabilize prices, is more concerned about its economy than the starving people of Africa, or the poor around us.

                God is the one constant in life.  Bread and water are changing commodities.  Heat (or cooling) and light seem to grow increasingly expensive. Even love and hate are cyclical, as seen in Ireland. But God never changes.

                Moses defined for the people the meaning of their obedience.  Exodus 23:25 “So you shall serve the Lord your God, and He shall bless your bread and your water.”

                So what is important???  The Bread and Water, or God’s Blessing?  Jesus reached the same conclusion in The Lord’s Prayer (Luke 11:3).  “Give us this day our daily bread.”  Again, what is important?  The bread! The water!  Or the One from whom it comes.

III.           Good Comes with the Invitation of God to His People.  “No good thing will the Lord withhold from them that walk uprightly.”  Some people seem to think that the answer is in sitting back and waiting for God to act.  It is clearly in God’s vision.  God foresaw for Israel a great blessing through David as King. 

                We are also dependent upon God’s Involvement.  God accepted David as a shepherd lad, saw him through many character flaws to help him become. But make no mistake, the Invitation calls us to commitment of self.  God calls us, invites us, to consider good on His terms, to acquaint ourselves with the world as it is.  What prayer is said at your table? “I thank thee, Lord, that I am not as others are”? What if instead we might pray, “Help me to be worthy of the bounty of Thy love.” 

                Read again that beautiful 100th Psalm.  “Make a joyful noise unto the Lord, all ye lands, Serve the Lord with gladness.  Come before His presence with singing.  Know ye that the Lord He is God, it is He that hath made us and not we ourselves.  We are His people and the sheep of His pasture.  Enter into His gates with Thanksgiving, and into His courts with praise.”

                God invites us to live in His world as His children.  Accept His invitation to the upright walk.  That’s not sinlessness.  It’s putting Him first.  Receive from Him the assurance of every “good thing” for our spiritual well-being.

Closing

                Bro. Emory Wallace told this story of a father from Mobile, AL. His daughter was in jail in DeRidder.  He called Bro. Wallace asking if he knew how she was doing.  Her cynicism was uncontained until he told her about her father’s call, and of his love.

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