November 3
Mornings With JesusGiving thanks always for all things unto God and the Father in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ; - Ephesians 5:20.
OH, how little of this there is to be found! How much does our selfishness predominate! Even in our religious exercises! Even when we succeed in our applications to God for supplies, we forget the Giver. And thus it was even with good Hezekiah himself. How had God appeared for him! And he even composed a song for the occasion, and yet what was after a while the consequence? It is said, “Hezekiah rendered not again according to the benefits done unto him.” Whatever be our condition, gratitude is required. Whatever be our circumstances, we have more to be grateful for than to complain of. Let us therefore take four views of this gratitude.
First, It is deserved. When we reflect on the Lord having remembered us in our low estate, of his having given his Son for, and his Spirit to us, of his redeeming our souls from the lowest hell, and of his engaging to conduct us to the highest heaven, that he hath “quickened us when dead in trespasses and in sins,” has forgiven us all our trespasses, and admitted us into a state of holy intimacy, so that by his grace we stand, rejoicing in hope of the glory of God, we must acknowledge that he has infinite claims upon our gratitude.
Secondly, This gratitude is distinguishing. What is it that at any time will most easily and powerfully excite our gratitude? A natural man, even if he is thankful, is moved to thankfulness by a line harvest, a safe journey, or a prosperous voyage, or on account of some outward temporal good. While these should not be overlooked, nor will they be by a Christian, yet these will not principally draw forth his gratitude. He will say, with the Apostle, “Thanks be unto God for his unspeakable gift.” He will not principally bless God that his grounds bring forth plenteously, but that he has a plenteousness of the means of grace, and that he is blessed with all Spiritual blessings in heavenly places.
Thirdly, This gratitude impractical. It will be so, if we are sensible of that obligation which we are never able to discharge. Let us not with regard to God as well as to man, “love in word and in tongue, but in deed and in truth.” David therefore says, “What shall I render unto the Lord for all his benefits toward me? I will walk before the Lord in the land of the living.” Upon which Philip Henry observes, that “though thanks-giving be good, thanks-living is much better. If a tree had a capacity, and wished to praise the husbandman, the only way in which it could do it would be by the excellence and abundance of fruit it produced to him.” “And herein,” says the Saviour, “is my Father glorified, that ye bear much fruit.” Thus, according to the well-known and beautiful language of the Liturgy, we should be concerned to “show forth his praise not only with our lips, but in our lives, by giving up ourselves to his service, and by walking before him in holiness and righteousness all our days.”
Lastly, This gratitude is to be never ending. We shall soon have done with many things here. We shall soon have done with sorrow, with sin, with a wicked world without us, and a wicked heart within us. We shall soon have done with some parts of our Christian experience and exercises. Faith will soon be lost in sight, and hope in fruition. There will be no need of patience where there is nothing to be endured or waited for. But as to thanksgiving and praise, though we shall change our places, we shall never change our employment, unless for higher and nobler strains. They that dwell in his house above will be still praising him, and therefore we may say-
“My days of praise shall ne’er be past,
While life, or breath, or being last,
Or immortality endures.”
