Fairfax Presbyterian Church

Henry G. Brinton

Thanks for Nothing!

Thanksgiving Eve

November 23 , 2005

Ephesians 1:15-23


It's Thanksgiving Eve. Time to count your blessings.

If you have food in the refrigerator, clothes on your back, a roof overhead and a place to sleep ... you are richer than 75 percent of this world of ours.

If you have money in the bank, cash in your wallet and spare change in a dish someplace ... you are among the top 8 percent of the Earth's wealthiest people.

If you woke up this morning with more health than illness ... you are more fortunate than the million who will not survive this week.

If you have never experienced the danger of battle, the loneliness of imprisonment, the agony of torture or the pangs of starvation ... you are ahead of 500 million people in the world.

If you can attend this worship service, or any other religion-related meeting, without fear of harassment, arrest, torture or death ... you are fortunate. Billions of people in the world cannot.

If you are a resident of Fairfax County — I just picked up this tidbit a week ago — you are in the top 1 percent of richest people in the world. There are over 5.9 billion people poorer than you are.

It's not hard for us to count our blessings, is it? Most of us could quickly and easily jot down a rather lengthy list, including thanks for family, for friends, for food, for clothing, for cars, for a home, for a job, for health, for freedom, for opportunity, and so on.

I love the praise testimony of the African-American church. One thanksgiving goes something like this: “Thank you, God, for waking me up this morning; for putting shoes on my feet, clothes on my back and food on my table. Thank you, God, for health and strength and the activities of my limbs. Thank you that I awoke this morning clothed in my right mind." (Thomas Hoyt Jr., "Testimony," Practicing Our Faith [San Francisco: Jossey-Bass Publishers, 1997], 94.)

I find that last line especially meaningful.

But think about this. If we follow this logic, then it means that if we lack these things, we cannot give thanks. We can count our blessings only if we have stuff to count. However, the apostle Paul encourages us to give thanks for nothing. In fact, he offers us the example of his own thanksgiving for nothing at all -- not one physical, material, tangible thing.

Instead, Paul gives constant thanks for things which are not things: Faith in the Lord Jesus, love toward the saints, a spirit of wisdom and revelation, the riches of God's glorious inheritance and the immeasurable greatness of God's power (Ephesians 1:15-19). None of these blessings can be seen, touched, purchased or possessed — like food, clothing, cars, boats or homes. And yet, they are the very greatest gifts we could ever receive. To give thanks for the nontangibles is what Scripture calls praise. Praise is the recognition that it is all about God … and not about me.

In the classic book The Little Prince, the fox character is saying goodbye to the little prince, and as he leaves he says, "And now here's my secret, a very simple secret: It is only with the heart that one can see rightly; what is essential is invisible to the eye."

"What is essential is invisible to the eye," the little prince repeats, so that he will be sure to remember. This fox's insight is right in line with what the apostle Paul wrote to the Corinthians: "We look not at what can be seen but at what cannot be seen; for what can be seen is temporary, but what cannot be seen is eternal" (2 Corinthians 4:18).

It is the unseen that is eternal. What is essential is invisible to the eye.

This approach to Thanksgiving runs counter to conventional wisdom, and it refuses to fall into step with the swarm of shoppers that will surge into shopping malls this Friday to begin the Christmas buying binge. "Black Friday," they call it — the biggest shopping day of the year. It's not black because it's bad, according to merchants, but because they count on it to turn the red in their books to black. They should call it "Green Friday," the color of money.

But ponder the perspective of the apostle Paul. He doesn't give thanks for gold jewelry, Game Cubes, leather jackets, personal care products, computer games and DVDs. He refuses to focus his gaze on the things that can be seen, because he knows that these things are temporary.

Instead, he looks only at the essential and eternal things that are invisible to the eye. When he counts his blessings, he lists absolutely nothing you can buy, and nothing you can own — only faith, love, a spirit of wisdom, a spirit of revelation, God's inheritance, God's power.

Paul first gives thanks for faith and love. "I have heard of your faith in the Lord Jesus and your love toward all the saints," he reports, "and for this reason I do not cease to give thanks for you" (1:15). Paul knows that the sign of true success is not a Lexus, or a house on the Delaware shore, or a job with a six-figure salary. Instead, success is being a person who trusts Christ completely, and who loves neighbors consistently. This living out of the vertical and horizontal dimensions of life — a vertical relationship with Jesus, combined with a horizontal relationship with neighbor — is the key to a perfectly balanced and fulfilling life.

I saw these vertical and horizontal dimensions come together on a recent mission trip to Honduras. As you might know, Honduras is the second-poorest country in the Western Hemisphere, and 47 percent of the population lives below the international poverty line. But when a group of men and I attended a worship service with the students of a Christian boarding school in the town of La Entrada, we were overwhelmed by the enthusiastic singing and praying of the students, and their clear love for God and for each other.

They had nothing. Nothing, that is, except for faith in the Lord Jesus, and love toward all the saints.

Paul also gives thanks for a spirit of wisdom and revelation (v. 17), which he prays will come out of our ever-expanding relationship with God through Christ. This spirit of wisdom opens our eyes to what God is planning for us, and it helps us to see that there is nothing richer or more valuable than a life in communion with God, both today and in the life to come. It is with this spirit of wisdom and revelation that we can finally grasp the riches of God's glorious inheritance (v. 18), a heavenly inheritance far more valuable than stocks or bonds or savings accounts or real estate.

As many of you know, I lost my father this year, after a two-year struggle with cancer. One of my responsibilities has been to help my mother with her finances, and so I’ve become intimately acquainted with the investments and accounts that my father left behind. He was a good money manager, and so my mother is going to be just fine, financially, but I’ve been struck by something as I’ve worked with these numbers: Financial matters that seem so important in life suddenly seem so trivial in death. As I think about my father’s life, I am far more thankful that he was a man of faith than I am grateful that he was a good investor. The riches of God’s glorious inheritance are so much more valuable to me now than any portfolio of earthly investments.

The final invisible item that Paul wants us to appreciate is the immeasurable greatness of God's power, a power that has raised Jesus Christ from the dead and seated him in the heavenly places. This power has put Jesus in a place of ultimate authority, far above every earthly ruler, not only in this age but also in the age to come, so that everything on earth is now under the soles of his sandals (vv. 19-22).

In short, Jesus rules.

Best of all, this power trickles down to us. Paul tells us that God's amazing power is at work in those of us who believe, and this power is experienced as we take part in the life of the Christian church (vv. 19, 23). It doesn't really matter how much wealth or power or prestige or personnel or inventory or square footage we control in this world, because our greatest influence comes through our work as disciples of Christ.

• It is as followers of Jesus that we experience the divine life and power of God that fills all things.

• It is as followers of Jesus that we are able to endure incredible hardship and overcome enormous personal obstacles.

• It is as followers of Jesus that we are able to share the love and grace and hope and peace and forgiveness of our Lord.

• It is as followers of Jesus that we are able to step out in mission and share the gospel in both our words and our deeds.

None of these is a "thing," in a material sense. But whether we are rich or poor, homeowners or homeless, working or unemployed, Americans or Hondurans, we have access to an amazing set of essential, eternal, unseen treasures.

As Christians, we can honestly say to God: Thanks for everything. Amen.