The Wanderer

As I walked through the wilderness of this world …

“We give thanks”

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I have been working on a daily devotional, chipping away at the material. It is a long project, and taking some time, but I hope will be of eventual value to many. Today’s revision happened to coincide with American Thanksgiving, and so I offer it as both a taster of what I hope will be more to come, but also a nugget of what I trust is goodness for today.

We give thanks to the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, praying always for you, since we heard of your faith in Christ Jesus and of your love for all the saints. (Colossians 1:3–4)

The apostle Paul was a man distinctly marked by a spirit of thankfulness. It is striking how often in his various writings that theme comes up. It is prominent, rich, and well-developed. It is evident even in the narrative of his life and labours in Luke’s history of the acts of the risen Christ, tracing the work of Christ’s servant, Paul, in the spirit in which he carried it out. In fact, what is interesting is how often what you might have thought would be a brief aside actually develops into a rich and intense flow of appreciation.

Paul’s thanksgivings, even in his shorter letters, rarely last a line or two—they tend to roll on and on! So, for example, starting from Colossians 1:3, he says, “We give thanks to the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, praying always for you, since we heard of your faith in Christ Jesus and of your love for all the saints.” While there is a natural break in the thought at that point, or at least a pause, Paul actually rolls on for another few lines, speaking of thanksgiving because of the hope that you have, the hope which you heard before in the word of the truth of the gospel which has come to you, bringing forth fruit in you since you heard and knew the grace of God in truth, the things which you learned from our dear fellow servant, a faithful minister of Christ. There are just so many things that make Paul smile in gratitude, and bring his praises and his thanksgivings to God!

While there is a richness, breadth and variety in the expressions of thanksgiving, it is easy to trace them all back to the same root and to identify the same immediate fruit. Yes, there are many times when Paul gives thanks for the gifts that are evident among God’s people. Yes, there are many times when Paul gives thanks for the works that God’s people do. However, you notice where it always begins: “We give thanks to the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, praying always for you, since we heard of your faith in Christ Jesus and of your love for all the saints.” What lies at the root of Paul’s gratitude to God is the gift of life in Christ, the faith of God’s people toward him, and their love for the other saints. These are typical of the fundamental realities of the new life.

These are basic blessings! So ordinary in some ways, and so extraordinary in others, they are the features of Christian living that Paul simply delights over. “You have faith!” he says. “You have come to believe in the Lord Jesus Christ. You have love for God and for his people. You have hope, that certain prospect of the glory which is to come.” Now, there is much that flows out of all that. There are many details surrounding that. Nevertheless, at root it is the wonder of what God has worked in the hearts of those who were by nature lost and undone that always moves Paul to these heights of appreciation and delight for the divine work. He traces back all of those mercies to the great work of God in Christ Jesus. He is always looking up to the the heart of God and the hand of God from and by which these good things have been dispensed to those who have received them.

That is a wonderful example for us who know the grace of God and see that grace at work around us. It is very easy for us to be complainers and resentful. It is easy for us to concentrate on the things which we lack and the things which do not happen and the things which have not taken place and the difficulties which we face.

But what about if we looked not just in our own lives, but in the lives of our brothers and sisters in Christ, and traced out the faith that they have in Christ Jesus and the love that marks their lives for others who know the Lord and the hope that characterises them? Would it not be good if we could give thanks to God for those who enjoy such mercies? Notice again how all this carries us back heavenward. It turns our hearts and our eyes back towards God, the good and the gracious Giver.

Let us, then, be thankful. If we want to be and remain thankful, then we should always start at the very heart of those saving realities, looking for the faith and the love and the hope that characterises God’s people, recognising them as gifts from heaven, and then turning back to the God who gives them, praising him for what he gives and for their demonstration in the lives of all God’s people.

Written by Jeremy Walker

Thursday 23 November 2023 at 11:37

One Response

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  1. Thanks for the thought, Jeremy. Just finished studying Colossians with a group of friends. Daily devotional? Would definitely be interested in making use of it when it’s published.

    Ben Scotton

    Sunday 26 November 2023 at 23:07


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