Saturday, December 22, 2018

Walls


I was troubled thinking about the threatened survival of many churches, and the pastors who lead them. Then the thought was brought to me:
"If you're not thankful for what you have, you'll lose it."
 
Then I saw as thanks and appreciation were given, walls of protection began to be built around. Perhaps that's why it is stated that "in everything" we are to give thanks, and it is described as "the will of God".
The giving of thanks, appreciation, and gratitude are of great importance to God, and are repeatedly commanded to us in scripture. I'm sure it is not commanded for us to do for His benefit, but for ours.
Are we thankful for our children, even when the relationship gets difficult? Our parents? Our spouses? The place of provision, our employment, that has been appointed for us? Our churches? Our pastors? The stunningly blessed nation with which we have been entrusted?How would our lives be impacted if we were to suddenly lose these people and things? If we are not actively thankful, it could happen, it has happened.
When difficulties or disappointments come, isn't our first reaction to complain and fret? Don't we look for whom to blame? When we pray in these challenging moments, don't we pray for the other person, or the situation to be "changed"? "Please God, change my wife, my husband, and bring her/him to repentance." What if we build walls of thanksgiving around them instead, even when the situation has become difficult? Isn't it just at these times that those walls are most needed?
How did Paul build a protective wall around the churches in the foreign territories that he risked life and limb to establish?
"We give thanks to God always for you all, making mention of you in our prayers...For what thanks can we render to God for you, for all the joy which we rejoice for your sake before our God, night and day praying exceedingly that we may see your face and perfect what is lacking in your faith?"   1 Thess. 1:2, 3:9-10
"I thank my God always concerning you for the grace of God which was given to you by Christ Jesus..."  1 Cor. 1:4
"First, I thank my God through Jesus Christ for you all,...that without ceasing I make mention of you always in my prayers."  Rom. 1:8-9
"I thank my God upon every remembrance of you, always in every prayer of mine making request for you all with joy..."   Phil. 1:3-4
"I thank my God, making mention of you always in my prayers..."  Philemon 1:4
Paul's thanks to God for these young churches and saints, who were always facing threats and dangers because of their faith in Christ, did not flow from their perfect state. For some of these churches, Paul goes on to give serious correction. Paul was surrounding these infant churches with the protective wall of thanksgiving.
In another part of scripture, on the occasion of a written decree of a powerful king ordering the persecution to death for the worship of God, Daniel continued kneeling before God three times a day in prayer and the giving of thanks, a practice that he had established since he was very young (Dan. 6:7-10). A wall of protection was established around him as he was sentenced to death in a den of lions. Not only was he spared, but the king reversed himself and ordered the worship of God in all his kingdom. "So this Daniel prospered in the reign of Darius and in the reign of Cyrus the Persian."   Dan. 6:28
If I had been Daniel, no doubt I would have been praying to God according to the dire circumstances that had come upon me. However, Daniel had developed a habit, or way of life, that involved thanks to God "in everything". Daniel was saved by the walls of protection constructed in his thanksgiving to God.
We are instructed by scripture to enter God's courts and gates with thanksgiving and praise. Could that be because the walls around His courts and gates are constructed from thanksgiving and praise? As we become that same thanksgiving and praise, we are able to pass through them, and enter. Similarly, to enter the walls of the New Jerusalem, only those who bring their glory and honor, could do so (Rev. 21:24).
The walls that encircle the New Jerusalem coming down from heaven, derive from a root word that translates, "break forth, produce fruit from seed, to bear or bring forth, be born, be delivered, be in travail". These walls are so great, that it requires a twelve-layered foundation underneath it. Could it be that those mighty walls, garnished with precious jewels, were conceived in the seed of thanks? Jesus talks about a mighty work that was accomplished in thanks:

Out of ten Samaritan lepers that Jesus sent off to the priests, one returned to thank Him (Lk. 17:12-19). Jesus asked him, "But where are the nine?" ...And He said to him, "Arise, go your way. Your faith has made you well."
Our thanks to God "in everything" is the ultimate expression of our faith. As the new year approaches, I have determined to make a new effort to develop the Daniel habit of giving God thanks "in everything". Out of the seed of this thanksgiving, I look forward to seeing the  fruit that will come forth, and the great protective walls that will rise up out of the ground.

Our Father constructs walls of protection from our thanksgiving.

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