“Giving thanks always and for everything to God the Father in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ.” –Ephesians 5:20
I love Thanksgiving Day. It is a holiday that does not require hype. Decorations are minimal, there are few songs which prepare us for it, and, for me, centers on God to whom we are to give thanks. As we look forward to filling our plates this Thursday with turkey and fixings, let us think about what we are thankful for before our God whose face we feast before.
Paul tells us, give thanks always and for everything to God. Always. There is never a moment in our lives where thanksgiving to God is inappropriate. For everything. We must always be thankful to God for every good and every bad, every comfort and every trouble, every smile and every tear.
CS Lewis once said, “We ought to give thanks for all fortune: if it is good, because it is good, if bad, because it works in us patience, humility and the contempt of this world and the hope of our eternal country” (Collected Letters Volume2, Page 869).
So, let us give thanks to God for hard things. For the troubles which arise in our relationships to show His mercy and power to reconcile. For the lows in our lives to know true contentment. To find ourselves at the end of our ropes in stress, whether it is work, marriage, parenting, friends, to know our strength comes from the Lord. For anxious times to know His peace and remain constant in prayer.
However, let us also be thankful for the good because it is good, as Lewis encouraged. As the hymn goes,
“Count your blessings, name them one by one;
Count your blessings, see what God hath done!”
Psalm65:11 says, “You crown the year with Your bounty; Your wagon tracks overflow with abundance.” His sovereign providence fills us to abundance.
In a sermon on this Psalm, Spurgeon said, “Let our hearts be warmed; let our spirits remember, meditate, and think upon this goodness of the Lord. Meditation upon this mercy may tend to nourish in you the tenderest feelings of affection, and your souls will be knit to the Father of spirits, who pitieth his children.”
Our thanksgiving is more than what benefits God gives. Our thanksgiving is highest for God’s presence with us. Spurgeon said, “the sense that Jesus Christ is with his people drowns every note of sorrow, and every heart is tuned to loudest notes of thankfulness.”
When your plate is filled this coming Thursday and you find yourself thinking about what you are thankful for, remember to give thanks always and for everything to God. Yes, for the troubles that drove you to cry out to God for mercy as well as praise for the good He has done. And above all, our hearts are always thankful for everything as Jesus Christ is with us forever.

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