A
Season of Thanks
"...O
Lord, that lends me life,
Lend me
a heart replete with thankfulness."
Shakespeare,
"Henry VI, Pt. II."
I had another birthday
the other day, and for me it was an occasion for thankfulness. Another reminder that every day is a grace
gift from God and each new year of life a blessing from His hand. Coming so close to Thanksgiving as it did
this year, only two days shy, it stirred my thoughts even more toward gratitude
to my Lord. He has given me life three
times over. The first time, naturally,
when I was born. The second time came in
Bible school when I was nine years old.
Through His Son Jesus, I was born into His kingdom. Nearly eight years ago, on Valentine's Day,
the third time came. A severe headache
turned out to be a brain hemmorhage that doctors said should have killed me in
minutes. They couldn't understand why it
didn't. However, twenty five years prior
to the appearance of the aneurism, I had suffered a head injury in an
automobile accident. Although we could
make no sense of it at the time, I now see that the sovereign hand of God was
preparing me even then for the survival that puzzled the doctors a quarter of a
century later. By His grace, He had
lifted me up, had healed me, had kept me alive.
Thank you, Lord, for your incomprehensible grace.
On my birthday this
year, I received some other reasons for thankfulness . In one of the earliest Candle Drippings
(#3, March 28, 1990), I shared the story of Rachel Allen, who, at age
twenty one months had a form of leukemia that was diagnosed as incurable. Doctors found only one course of treatment
that held out even the remotest hope for the child. It was a six week treatment plan, yet after
only three weeks, she had grown worse instead of better. Toward the end of the six weeks, while making
funeral preparations, her father, Dr. Ronald Allen, received the news that
remission had actually begun. This fall,
Dr. Allen moved from Portland, Oregon to Dallas to begin teaching at Dallas
Theological Seminary. On my birthday, I
visited Dr. Allen at the seminary; and during our conversation, he gave me the
wonderful news. Rachel is now eighteen
years old, fully well, and planning to graduate from high school this
year. Thanks again, Lord, for your
lovingkindness.
How can we express our
thankfulness to the Lord for His wonderful mercies? As I left Dr. Allen's office that afternoon,
an answer to this question came to mind.
From the Psalms, a source of strength and comfort both he and I have
learned to draw from. "It is good
to give thanks to the Lord, and to
sing praises to Thy name, O Most High; To declare Thy lovingkindness in the
morning, and Thy faithfulness by night ...." (Psalm 92.1-5).
To Thank and to praise
the Lord is both a duty and a delight.
To review those qualities of grace that belong to Him should fill our
hearts with joy. When I see His
lovingkindness expressed toward those I love, when I see His sovereign power
and faithfulness to His people --- like Rachel Allen, like even me, in spite of
my weaknesses and failures, I am ready to sing with the psalmist my praise and
thanks to Him. It is a precious thing to
give thanks to God, a precious privilege to receive His mercies and simply
return to Him a whispered word of thanks.
It is an ever-present reminder of our dependence on Him. "What do you have that you did not
receive?" asks the Apostle Paul (1 Corinthians 4.7). And James reminds us that "every good
gift and every perfect gift is from above, and cometh down from the Father of
lights" (James 1.17, KJV), such gifts as lovingkindness in the morning and
faithfulness in the evening. In the
morning, remember all the provision God has made for us as we face the
responsibilities of the day. We need,
too, to reflect on the protection He has given us through the night. After all, He doesn't owe us a new day of
life; but in His steadfast love, He gives it to us. And at the end of the day, how can we sleep
without thanking Him for His faithfulness to us throughout that day?
Each day, my back yard
fills with birds. Sparrows. Starlings.
Hummingbirds. Mourning doves. All day long, they busy themselves gathering
what has been given them. And as they
gather, they chirp and sing their thanks to God. It is a blessing just watching them. Amy Carmichael tells a similar experience of
a sunbird in her yard. Every time he
sips sugar and water, she says, he chirps and flicks his little tail. It's his way of saying, Thank you. "Do you flick your tail?" Ms.
Carmichael asks. "Don't laugh and
say, 'I haven't got a tail.' Your tail
is in your mouth. It is your
tongue. Use it." Our heavenly Father gives us good treasures
daily out of His heavenly store. Maybe
we can't always voice our thanks, but we can be full of thanks always. We can have a spirit of thanks always. Thankful.
Grateful. Right now, I am. Are you?