Welcome to the blog of Pastor Alton Stone, from Simpsonville, SC. Pastor Stone is a retired Ordained Bishop of The Church of God, Cleveland, Tennessee with over 45 years of pastoral ministry.

Tuesday, November 19, 2013

THANKS-GIVING

I've heard a lot of droopy prayers in my life. Hey, I've prayed a lot of them, too.

  • Prayers of desperation — God, you've got to help me!
  • Prayers of self-pity — God, things are so awful!
  • Prayers of resignation — God, if you want to leave me unemployed, then I can't stop you!
But I'm learning how to pray a different kind of prayer — prayer said with thanksgiving. I learned it from Paul who, writing from prison, taught me a most powerful lesson. He said,
"Do not be anxious about anything, but in everything, by prayer and petition, with thanksgiving, present your requests to God."1
Strange. Here he is suffering himself, yet he's telling me to pray with thanksgiving.
Thanksgiving is the seasoning that makes our prayers edible to God. After all, who wants to hear people whine all the time? I've learned that you can't whine and give thanks in the same breath. Self-pity and thankfulness don't mix any better than oil and water.

In fact, mixing thanks with prayer somehow changes it. When we remember what God has done for us in the past and think about who he is in the present — and express that in thankfulness — our prayers become more gentle, more trusting somehow. Thankful prayers are offered with faith. And faith is an essential ingredient for prayers that God chooses to answer.

We remember the Pilgrims on Thanksgiving Day, not so much for their turkey dinner, but for the sheer faith that inspired them to give thanks in a year that saw nearly half their number die of sickness. Yet they prayed with thanksgiving.

When your annual day of feasting is over, you may bemoan your extra helpings of dressing, mashed potatoes, and pumpkin pie. But if you can hang on to the "thanks" part of Thanksgiving, you'll be a different person. Because when you learn to talk to God about your needs — mixed with a healthy dose of heartfelt thanks — then you have crossed the divide from whining at God to real prayer.

Happy thanks-giving!

1 comment:

  1. Yes, thanks for the good encouragement and exhortation. Sometimes, I find it hard to embrace the thankfulness of heart that marks true thanksgiving. I take comfort in the fact that in exercising my will to give thanks in the hard stuff I do not relinquish the responsibility to be honest with God about what I know is in my own heart.

    Yes, thanksgiving is important, but if I can't be honest with God about what is in my own heart, who can I be honest with? Part of humility is the willingness to be real before God about what is in my heart. It is a statement of admission that his love is not yet perfected in me. I am still afraid when I have been straining to hold on for so many years and still face non-response from the God who is my only hope.

    I am thankful for his many benefits. Yet, the fight of faith for me is to "forget not all his benefits" when the pain of the present is more than I can bear with contentment. Yes, I must bear it. Yes, I know he will not give me more than I can bear. I would like that super-natural strength to bear it without complaint (godliness with contentment is great gain) yet, what is a person to do if that person is not content to be discontent? God instructs us over and over to "be content", and I can instruct myself to be content, but how do I make myself be content when I am not content? I can only confess my condition before God and pray that he will forgive the wickedness of my heart and grant freedom from that discontent.

    I would love to cross the divide from whining at God to "real prayer" but God knows my needs, he knows he has not met my needs, he tells me nothing about what I can do to meet my needs and nothing about how I am to survive while I wait for him to meet my needs. So, heartfelt thanksgiving comes only from thanking him that I am warm and fed and I really don't want to be shivering in the cold and hungry and still have the needs unmet. God knows my heart and he knows my needs. Some days I live in resolve in the midst of the mess, some days I rattle the heavens with my cries to be heard from on high. I have obligations that are not being met. My conscience will not allow me to lie to the Holy Spirit.

    I am pretty sure if I were to parrot the right words in prayer the host of heaven would hear the words and very likely believe them. God on the other hand would still know the truth and my conscience would condemn me. I would rather just keep a pure heart before God and let him deal with the clean-up. I remind myself that the powers and principalities of Auschwitz that facilitated the building and implementation of the death camp did much evil and God allowed it. God causes all things to work together for good for those who are in Christ Jesus who are the called according to his purpose, but not all things are good.

    Thank you Lord for the law of liberty in Christ Jesus, the spirit of life in Christ Jesus and for letting us be the happy people whose God is the Lord. Lord, let the joy and gladness of your presence permeate the depths of my heart and the hearts of the people of America and around the world. Lord, cleanse our hearts from all of the foundations of falsehoods and draw us toward believing your truth that we may press in to the love, joy, peace, longsuffering, goodness, kindness and gentleness of those who put their trust in you. Lord, let our hearts not become thankless. Let our hearts be filled with thankfulness that we may know you and love you by your grace in our hearts and with thankfulness of heart as we remember all of the benefits of belonging to you. Thank you Lord for your faithfulness to us and to our land. Heal our land Oh Lord, heal our land. In Jesus Name, by your mighty power, Amen.

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