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PRAYER, praise
and thanksgiving all go in company. A close relationship exists between
them. Praise and thanksgiving are so near alike that it is not easy to
distinguish between them or define them separately The Scriptures join
these three things together. Many are the causes for thanksgiving and
praise. The Psalms are filled with many songs of praise and hymns of
thanksgiving, all pointing back to the results of prayer. Thanksgiving
includes gratitude. In fact thanksgiving is but the expression of an
inward conscious gratitude to God for mercies received. Gratitude is an
inward emotion of the soul, involuntarily arising therein, while
thanksgiving is the voluntary expression of gratitude.
Thanksgiving is oral, positive, active. It is the giving out of
something to God. Thanksgiving comes out into the open. Gratitude is
secret, silent, negative, passive, not showing its being till expressed
in praise and thanksgiving. Gratitude is felt in the heart. Thanksgiving
is the expression of that inward feeling.
Thanksgiving
is just what the word itself signifies-the giving of thanks to God. It
is giving something to God in words which we feel at heart for blessings
received. Gratitude arises from a contemplation of the goodness of God.
It is bred by serious meditation on what God has done for us. Both
gratitude and thanksgiving point to, and have to do with God and his
mercies. The heart is consciously grateful to God.
The soul
gives expression to that heartfelt gratitude to God in words or acts.
Gratitude is born of meditation on God's grace and mercy "The Lord hath
done great things for us, whereof we are glad." Herein we see the value
of serious meditation. "My meditation of Him shall be sweet." Praise is
begotten by gratitude and a conscious obligation to God for mercies
given. As we think of mercies past, the heart is inwardly moved to
gratitude.
I love to think on mercies past,
And future good implore;
And all my cares and sorrows cast
On Him whom I adore.
Love is the
child of gratitude Love grows as gratitude is felt, and-then breaks out
into ,praise and thanksgiving to God: "I love the Lord because He hath
heard my voice and my supplication." Answered prayers cause gratitude,
and gratitude brings forth a love that declares it will not cease
praying: "Because He hath inclined His ear unto me, therefore will I
call upon Him as long as I live." Gratitude and love move to larger and
increased praying.
Paul appeals
to the Romans to dedicate themselves wholly to God, a living sacrifice,
and the constraining motive is the mercies of God:
I beseech you, therefore, brethren, by the mercies of God, that ye
present your bodies a living sacrifice, holy, acceptable unto God, which
is your reasonable service.
Consideration of God's mercies not only begets gratitude, but induces a
large consecration to God of all we have and are. So that prayer, giving
and consecration are all linked together inseparably
Gratitude
and thanksgiving always looks back at the past though it may also take
in the present. But prayer always looks to the future. Thanksgiving
deals with things already received. Prayer deals with things desired,
asked for and expected. Prayer turns to gratitude and praise when the
things asked for have been granted by God.
As prayer brings things to us which beget gratitude and thanksgiving, so
praise and gratitude promote prayer, and induce more praying and better
praying.
Gratitude
and thanksgiving forever stand opposed to all murmurings at God's
dealings with us, and all complainings at our lot. Gratitude and
murmuring never abide in the same heart at the same time. An
unappreciative spirit has no standing beside gratitude and praise. And
true prayer corrects complaining and promotes gratitude and
thanksgiving. Dissatisfaction at one's lot, and a disposition to be
discontented with things which come to us in the providence of God, are
foes to gratitude and enemies to thanksgiving.
The
murmurers are ungrateful people. Appreciative men and women have neither
the time nor disposition to stop and complain. The bane of the
wilderness journey of the Israelites on their way to Canaan was their
proneness to murmur and complain against God and Moses. For this, God
was several times greatly grieved, and it took the strong praying of
Moses to avert God's wrath because of these murmurings. The absence of
gratitude left no room nor disposition for praise and thanksgiving, just
as it is so always. But when these same Israelites were brought through
the Red Sea dry shod, while their enemies were destroyed, there was a
song of praise led by Miriam, the sister of Moses. One of the leading
sins of these Israelites was forgetfulness of God and His mercies, and
ingratitude of soul. This brought forth murmurings and lack of praise,
as it always does.
When Paul
wrote to the Colossians to let the word of Christ dwell in their hearts
richly and to let the peace of God rule therein, he said to them, "and
be ye thankful," and adds, "admonishing yourselves in psalms and hymns
and spiritual songs, singing with grace in your hearts unto the Lord."
Further on,
in writing to these same Christians, he joins prayer and thanksgiving
together: "Continue in prayer, and watch in the same with thanksgiving."
And writing to the Thessalonians, he again joins them in union: "Rejoice
evermore. Pray without ceasing. In everything give thanks, for this is
the will of God concerning you."
We thank Thee, Lord of heaven and earth,
Who hast preserved us from our birth;
Redeemed us oft from death and dread,
And with Thy gifts our table spread.
Wherever
there is true prayer, there thanksgiving and gratitude stand hard by
ready to respond to the answer when it comes. For as prayer brings the
answer, so the answer brings forth gratitude and praise. As prayer sets
God to work, so answered prayer sets thanksgiving to work. Thanksgiving
follows answered prayer just as day succeeds night.
True prayer
and gratitude lead to full consecration, and consecration leads to more
praying and better praying. A consecrated life is both a prayer life and
a thanksgiving life.
The spirit
of praise was once the boast of the primitive church. This spirit abode
on the tabernacles of these early Christians, as a cloud of glory out of
which God shined and spoke. It filled their temples with the perfume of
costly, flaming incense. That this spirit of praise is sadly deficient
in our present-day congregations must be evident to every careful
observer. That it is a mighty force in projecting the gospel, and its
body of vital forces, must be equally evident. To restore the spirit of
praise to our congregations should be one of the main points with every
true pastor.
The normal
state of the church is set forth in the declaration made to God in Psalm
65: "Praise waiteth for Thee, 0 Lord, and unto Thee shall the vow be
performed."
Praise is so distinctly and definitely wedded to prayer, so inseparably
joined, that they cannot be divorced. Praise is dependent on prayer for
its full volume and its sweetest melody.
Singing is
one method of praise, not the highest it is true, but it is the ordinary
and usual form. The singing service in our churches has much to do with
praise, for according to the character of the singing will be the
genuineness or the measure of praise. The singing may be so directed as
to have in it elements which deprave and debauch prayer. It may be so
directed as to drive away everything like thanksgiving and praise. Much
of modern singing in our churches is entirely foreign to anything like
hearty, sincere praise to God.
The spirit
of prayer and of true praise go hand in hand. Both are often entirely
dissipated by the flippant, thoughtless, light singing in our
congregations. Much of the singing lacks serious thought and is devoid
of everything like a devotional spirit. Its lustiness and sparkle may
not only dissipate all the essential features of worship, but may
substitute the flesh for the spirit.
Giving
thanks is the very life of prayer. It is its fragrance and music, its
poetry and its crown. Prayer bringing the desired answer breaks out into
praise and thanksgiving. So that whatever interferes with and injures
the spirit of prayer necessarily hurts and dissipates the spirit of
praise.
The heart
must have in it the grace of prayer to sing the praise of God. Spiritual
singing is not to be done by musical taste or talent, but by the grace
of God in the heart. Nothing helps praise so mightily as a gracious
revival of true religion in the church. The conscious presence of God
inspires song. The angels and the glorified ones in heaven do not need
artistic directors to lead them, nor do they care for paid choirs to
chime in with their heavenly doxologies of praise and worship. They are
not dependent on singing schools to teach them the notes and scale of
singing. Their singing involuntarily breaks forth from the heart.
God is
immediately present in the heavenly assemblies of the angels and the
spirits of just men made perfect. His glorious presence creates the
song, teaches the singing, and impregnates their notes of praise. It is
so on earth. God's presence begets singing and thanksgiving, while the
absence of God from our congregations is the death of song, or, which
amounts to the same, makes the singing lifeless, cold and formal. His
conscious presence in our churches would bring back the days of praise
and would restore the full chorus of song.
Where grace
abounds, song abounds. When God is in the heart, heaven is present and
melody is there, and the lips overflow out of the abundance of the
heart. This is as true in the private life of the believer as it is so
in the congregations of the saints. The decay of singing, the dying down
and out of the spirit of praise in song, means the decline of grace in
the heart and the absence of God's presence from the people.
The main
design of all singing is for God's ear and to attract his attention and
to please him. It is "to the Lord," for his glory, and to his honor.
Certainly it is not for the glorification of the paid choir, to exalt
the wonderful musical powers of the singers, nor is it to draw the
people to the church, but it is for the glory of God and the good of the
souls of the congregation. Alas! How far has the singing of choirs of
churches of modern times departed from this idea! It is no surprise that
there is no life, no power, no unction, no spirit, in much of the church
singing heard in this day. It is sacrilege for any but sanctified hearts
and holy lips to direct the singing part of the service of God's house
of prayer.
Much of the
singing in churches would do credit to the opera house, and might
satisfy as mere entertainments, pleasing the ear, but as a part of real
worship, having in it the spirit of praise and prayer, it is a fraud, an
imposition on spiritually minded people, and entirely Unacceptable t
God. The cry should go out afresh, "Let all the people praise the Lord,"
for it is good to sing praises unto our God; for it is pleasant; and praise
is comely."
The music of
praise, for there is real music of soul in praise, is too hopeful and
happy to be denied. All these are in the "giving of thanks." I
Philippians, prayer is called "requests." "Let your requests be made
know Unto God," which describes prayer as an asking for a gift, giving
prominence to the thing asked for, making it emphatic, something to be
given by God and received by us, and not something to be done by us. And
all this is closet connected with gratitude to God, "with thanksgiving,
let your requests be made known Unto God."
God does
much for us in answer to prayer, but we need from Him man gifts, and for
them we are to make special prayer. According to our special needs, so
must our praying be. We are to be special and particular and bring to
the knowledge of God by prayer, supplication and thanksgiving, our
particular requests, the things we need, the things we greatly desire.
And with it accompanying all these requests, there must be thanksgiving.
It is indeed
a pleasing thought that what we are called upon to do on earth to praise
and give thanks, the angels in heaven and the redeemed disembodied
spirits of the saints are doing also. It is still further pleasing to
contemplate the glorious hope that what God wants us to do on earth, we
will I engaged in doing throughout an Unending eternity. Praise and
thanksgiving will be our blessed employment while we remain in heaven.
Non will we eve grow weary of this pleasing task.
Joseph Addison sets before us, in verse, this pleasing prospect:
Through every period of my life
Thy goodness I'll pursue;
And after death, in distant worlds,
The pleasing theme renew.
Through all eternity to Thee
A grateful song I'll raise;
But Oh! eternity's too short
To utter all Thy praise.
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