Philippians 4:10-20 What
has always been so remarkable to me when I read Paul’s letter to the
congregation at Philippi is that this “epistle of joy” was written while Paul
was in prison for preaching the
gospel.
He was separated from friends and family members and fellow believers. He was in a dark and dangerous place. He didn’t know from one minute to the next
what the future held. And yet it was joy
that filled his heart because he knew that the Lord was with him and would
provide for him in whatever way was best for him.
How much more can we testify to the same! We are here in this beautiful place,
surrounded by those we love who love us.
All our needs (and the vast majority of our wants!) have been abundantly
met by the Lord since we gathered here on this same night last year.
We too can be thankful for what the Lord has provided to us! We too can be content with the Lord’s
provision! We too can be generous with
others! And we too can be confident that
in the same generous way that God has always provided for his people, so he
will provide for us in the year to come.
Paul wrote:
I rejoiced in the Lord greatly that now at
length you have revived your concern for me. You were indeed concerned for me,
but you had no opportunity.
People who were imprisoned in the
Roman Empire were not cared for by the state.
If you were to have the necessities of life while you were in prison, if
you were to survive, someone on the outside had to care for you and provide for
you and meet your needs.
That
is what the saints of God at Philippi had done for Paul.
Paul
thanked God and rejoiced in the Lord for their generosity and care because he
knew that they were the means that God used to bless him.
So
it is for us on this Thanksgiving Day.
We are fed by the hands of farmers and ranchers. We are protected by the hands of those who
wield the sword in the state. We are
healed by the hands of medical personnel.
It is right to thank God for all these people because we know that it is
God who is meeting our needs through them.
It
is true that we are not in a Roman prison, but our lives are no less dependent
upon the care and concern of others as was Paul’s when he was imprisoned-- and
so we are thankful for the work of others on our behalf!
In
the same way, we are also thankful that we are able to be of service to
others—that our work can be the means that God uses to care for others. Just think of what it must have meant to the
Christians at Philippi to know that God had used them to help Paul!
And
so today we are thankful for our daily work and know that through it God meets
the needs of others and cares for them in real ways—that we are God’s hands
through which the needs of those around us are met. Paul wrote:
I am not speaking of being in need, for I
have learned in whatever situation I am to be content. I know how to be brought
low, and I know how to abound. In any and every circumstance, I have learned
the secret of facing plenty and hunger, abundance and need. I can do all things through him who strengthens me.
I have learned to be content. That is what Paul says. On this Thanksgiving Day can we say the same,
that we are content, right here and right now with what the Lord has provided?
Please understand, Paul was not going to die of hunger and thirst
and he was not going to freeze to death.
But he was still in prison. He
still did not know from one moment to the next whether he would be executed or
not. He had no idea whether he would
ever be released or not.
But he was content, in that moment with the Lord’s provision no
matter what the future held for him—whether it was plenty and abundance or
hunger and need—he was content because he had learned the secret to
contentment.
And so then, what about us tonight, are we content? Do we even believe in or want
contentment. I’ll never forget a sermon
I heard on this text when I was a young man and telling Pastor Wuensche that I
thought contentment was a dangerous thing because it made us lazy and
complacent.
I hadn’t lived very long at that point and I still thought that I
could move the universe (or at least my own part of it!) by working harder and
smarter than everyone else-- and there was no way I was ever going to fall into
this trap of contentment! I didn’t
really see that attitude for the idolatry that it was where I was my own sad,
petty little god.
And yet, Paul said that he had learned the secret to contentment,
that he could do all things through the one who gave him strength. But wasn’t he in prison? He was!
Wasn’t he helpless to escape? He
was! Couldn’t he be executed in any moment? He could!
But what Paul knew (and young Allan didn’t know!) is that the Lord
was actually in control of his life—that the Lord had a plan for his life and
the way it ought to go—that in every moment and circumstance and situation the
only thing that mattered was God’s will being done and that the Lord would meet
his needs so that HIS will was done.
That was enough for Paul and it is enough for us. We may not have everything we want. Our life may not be where we want it to
be. But the Lord’s good and gracious
will is being done in your life in this moment—and the Lord’s provision for
this moment—is more than enough for us to rest in—more than enough for our
contentment.
In fact, the Lord’s strength and the Lord’s provision is so
overflowing that we can share it with others.
Paul wrote:
It was kind of you to share my trouble. And you Philippians
yourselves know that in the beginning of the gospel, when I left Macedonia, no
church entered into partnership with me in giving and receiving, except you only.
Even in Thessalonica you sent me help for my needs once and
again. Not that I seek the gift, but I seek the fruit
that increases to your credit. I have received full payment,
and more. I am well supplied, having received from Epaphroditus the gifts you
sent, a fragrant offering, a sacrifice acceptable and pleasing to God.
On this Thanksgiving Day we are
thankful for everything we have received.
We know and rejoice in the fact that the Lord has given us every
material blessing we have need to support our lives.
But
are we thankful for the material blessings we have been able to give to
others? We should be!
The
Philippian Christians were known in the early church for their generosity. From the very beginning they had supported
the work of the Gospel throughout the world and now they generously supported
Paul in his imprisonment.
Paul
said that their gifts—given in faith and love to meets his needs—were a
fragrant offering and sacrifice that was acceptable and pleasing to God.
Over
this last year we have spent lots of money on lots of stuff that doesn’t really
matter and with the Christmas shopping season starting tomorrow we are about to
do the same thing all over again.
We
will spend because it is the expected social convention. We will spend because others are spending on
us. We will spend and end up angry
rather than thankful.
But
when we give to others to meet their needs—when our giving is part of our
partnership in the work of the Gospel—this spending and these gifts are
something else altogether!
They
are gifts that are ultimately offered to God—they are sacrificial acts of love
that are pleasing to God and acceptable in his sight because they are given
through faith in Jesus.
Here
in a few weeks the calendar year will end and we will begin that happy task of
gathering up all the financial information necessary to do our taxes and part
of that will be our financial statements from church. For Caroline and I there is nothing else in
our financial life that gives us as much joy and opportunity for thanksgiving as
what we have given to church and charities and those in need.
I
am thankful beyond measure for the opportunities that the Lord gives me to make
sure that the fruits of my labor are not just about some toy or trinket but are
part of his work in the world to care for people in time and eternity.
The
generosity of the Philippians has never been forgotten and never will be
forgotten because the Lord remembers even the smallest act of generosity on the
part of his people and promises that the hand we empty through our gifts to
others will be filled by again by him.
Paul
wrote: My God will supply every need of yours according to
his riches in glory in Christ Jesus. To
our God and Father be glory forever and ever. Amen.
On this Thanksgiving Eve we look back at our lives over this last
year and we must confess that there is not one thing needful for body and soul
that our Lord has not graciously, generously, abundantly met since gathered
here in this place, on this night, one year ago. Not one!
And the same has been true for every year before and we have the
promise of God that it will be the same in the years to come. Amen.
No comments:
Post a Comment