It is nearly a year since we moved back to Newent. We were just getting settled when lockdown happened. It hasn’t been an easy time, not being able to do normal things like attend church, sing with others, visit and be visited by people, shop as and when we want to, and trying to be careful to stay safe with all the changing regulations. In all these hardships and difficulties I have been challenged about how I am responding to the situation. I have realized that I have often focused on myself, and consequently this has resulted in negative conversations that have not encouraged or built people up.
Paul reminds
us to “pray without ceasing, give thanks in all circumstances; for this is the
will of God in Christ Jesus for you” (
What are
some of the things that we can give thanks to God for? It is easy to look back to the past and find
things for which we are thankful – our salvation, our new life in Christ, the
fellowship of the church, for family and friends –
the list could go on as we think about it. But the implication of Paul’s exhortation is
that we should be giving thanks for the things in the ‘now’. It is
easy to think of all the negatives – we can’t meet as a church or sing
together, we can’t entertain or have people (even family) in the home, and other
restrictions, which can easily lead to complaining. But Paul’s exhortation is to give thanks in
‘all circumstances’. So how do we do that?
We need to begin by asking God to open our eyes, so that we can see the things that God is doing in our present situations. It can also be helpful at the end of the day just to think through all that has happened that day, and see how God may have been part of those events. For example, we may have enjoyed a church service online. We can thank God for the technology that is now available freely that churches can use to communicate the message of God. We can thank God for equipping members in church who are capable of putting programmes together, for those God has gifted to communicate the message, or sing, or communicate well with children. We can thank God for the wider reach of an online service, and for all who listen who don’t know Christ yet.
On a more personal note, we can thank God for the opportunities He may have given us to bless someone with a phone call, or to talk to a neighbour, keeping social distance. We can thank God for His daily provisions and care, or for more time to do things that we weren’t able to do when life was so busy. If we are going to be thankful, we need to be looking out to see what God is doing each day through the circumstances of our lives.
But there is another aspect to
this. James reminds us that “the testing
of our faith produces steadfastness [or endurance]” (ch.1:3). The implication is clear. Life isn’t going to be easy, and so patience
and endurance are needed that will require perseverance, not giving up easily,
because the rewards are worth sticking at it for. James says that we are to count it all joy
when we meet these trials. Another word
we could use is to be thankful for it.
As we see beyond the immediate difficulty or hardship to what God will
do for us or in us, we can learn to be thankful. Paul reminds us in In the meantime, we continue to trust God,
thanking Him that he has not left us on our own, for He has promised never to
leave nor forsake us (, as gold in the
furnace to get rid of the impurities so that it might be proved genuine (
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