Sermon Tone Analysis

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By Pastor Glenn Pease
G. K. Chesterton has written a delightful account of a students encounter with his professor at Oxford.
The professor, or tutor as they called them, was a bright young man, but he was a follower of the pessimistic views of Schopenhauer.
He was disgusted with the weary worthless lives around him, and with the trash they treasured, and which he had to look at from his second floor apartment.
Especially offensive was that unattractive stucco house with a silly duck pond complete with ducks.
At the end of one of his frequent observations on the foolishness of people, the low estate of most human minds, and the futility of life in general, he concluded that the only intelligent course of action for a man of sense and sensibility would be to remove himself from the scene permanently.
This is where the student comes in.
He felt the time had come to test his professor's theory.
He returned to the professor's quarters later waving a wicked looking revolver.
He declared that he had come to put his tutor out of his misery.
The professor was reduced at once to un-philosophical entreaties.
As he begged for his life he backed out of his window and perched on the flagpole hoping to attract the attention of someone passing by.
The student standing at the window with the revolver called upon the pessimist to recant.
He made him give thanks for his miserable life, for the sky, the earth, and the trees.
He was also given the opportunity to bless his neighbor and express satisfaction with the ducks on the pond.
All of this he gladly did, and thereby showed that his theory on life was not very attractive in practice.
There are many pouting pessimists who would change their tune on a flagpole with a revolver in their back.
This would not prove that they were truly thankful people, but it would demonstrate that they were more grateful for life than they were willing to admit.
Facing death gives on a new perspective on life, and it makes it look even good to the pessimist.
Most pessimists and most un-believers do not need a revolver in their back to admit they have much for which to be grateful.
All it takes is the pressure of tradition and a family get together on Thanksgiving to compel them to recognize their good fortune.
Almost all non-Christians will be thankful for their material blessings, and for the fact that they are not freezing with the homeless, or starving with the hungry poor.
Christians cannot claim a monopoly on the attitude of gratitude.
What distinguishes the Christians thankfulness from the natural thankfulness of all people?
The distinction consists basically in the fact that the Christian has someone to thank.
The essence of his thanksgiving is a relationship to a person, and a supreme person who has a plan and purpose for his life.
The unbeliever's thanks is a sense of well being about his good luck, but there is no ultimate meaning behind it, for he has no concept of an ultimate purpose.
This means he loses the essence of thanksgiving, which is gratitude to God for his personal concern and purpose for us as individuals.
This is a key to happiness, for only people with a purpose can be truly happy on a permanent basis.
Paul tells us that the cause of much of the misery and darkness of the pagan world is due to the fact that they were not thankful.
This led to all kinds of perversions in religion and sex in a futile effort to find happiness without God.
Many are seeking to do the same thing today, but they are failing as men always have.
Man's only hope for happiness is in a thankful relationship to God, and in a finding of His purpose through Christ.
William Law asked, "Who was the greatest saint in the world?"
Then he answers, "It is not he who prays most or fasts most; it is not he who gives most alms, or is most eminent for temperance, chastity, or justice; but it is he who is always thankful to God, who receives everything as an instance of God's goodness and has a heart always ready to praise God for it.
David was far from a perfect man.
He was, in fact, notorious for his failures, and yet he is called the man after God's own heart.
It is hard to avoid the conclusion as we read the Psalms that the redeeming factor in his life that lifted him so close to God was his grateful heart.
Praise flows unceasingly from his lips and heart.
He competes with the angels of heaven who praise God night and day.
David had more than his share of trials, but he never ceased to praise God.
From youth to old age his theme was praise.
Whichever way he looked on the path of time he saw the providence of God at work.
He would agree with the poem prayer of Will Carlton:
We thank thee, O Father, for all that is bright,
The gleam of the day and the stars of the night,
The flowers of our youth and the fruits of our prime,
And the blessings that march down the pathway of time.
We want to follow David on one of his thankful journey's along the pathway of time, for he establishes a pattern of thankfulness that ought to be a characteristic of our lives as Christians.
In whatever direction he looks he has a thankful perspective.
Let's go with him first into yesterday and his thankfulness for the past.
I. YESTERDAY.
In verse 3 David looks back to a time of crisis when he cried out to God for help and mercy.
His heart is filled with praise to God because God heard him and gave him the strength he needed to cope with the trial.
There is not a Christian alive who cannot look back to yesterday and praise God for what He has done in their past.
If you forget all else, you cannot forget the cross and the fact that God has received you as His child because of your trust in Christ.
If yesterday was empty of all but the cross the Christian heart would still look back and be filled to overflowing with thankfulness.
But God did not stop with the gift of His Son.
When God gives He pours.
Showers of blessing have been ours already.
The reality of the trials does not diminish the reality of the blessings.
They are no less real because they have not been all of the real.
Above a bed in an English hospital is a bronze tablet with these words: "This bed has been endowed by the savings of a poor man who is grateful for an unexpected recovery."
Most all of us can look back and recognize that God has spared us from some illness or accident that would have taken us from the stage of history.
None of us would be here to praise God today had he not delivered us in some yesterday.
When Jesus instituted the Lord's Supper to keep us ever looking back to the cross, He knew the human tendency to forget and neglect the blessings of the past.
That is why he urged us to do this in remembrance of Him.
Benjamin Franklin had the same idea in mind when he moved at the Constitutional Convention in 1787: "That henceforth prayers, imploring thee the assistance of Heaven and it's blessings on our deliberations, beheld in the assembly every morning before we proceed to business."
In his speech in support of this motion he said the following:
"In this situation of this Assembly, groping as it were,
in the dark to find political truth, and scarce able to
distinguish when presented to us, how has it happened,
sir, that we have not hitherto once thought of humbly
applying to the Father of Lights to illuminate our
understandings?
In the beginning of the contest with
Britain, when we were sensible of danger, we had daily
prayers in this room for the Divine protection.
Our
prayers, sir, were heard; and they were graciously
answered.
To that kind Providence we owe this happy
opportunity of consulting in peace on the means of
establishing our future national felicity.
And have we
now forgotten that powerful Friend?
I have lived, sir,
a long time; and the longer I live, the more convincing
proofs I see of this truth, that God governs in the affairs
of men!"
This illustrates the tendency of American people to be like the people of Israel, and to forget God's great blessings of the past.
It also illustrates how a man who believes in a God of purpose and providence is filled with thankfulness.
Therefore, let us like David look back on yesterday and be grateful.
Look back, not like Lot's wife to mourn over what was forsaken to obey God.
Look back, not like the Israelites longing for the garlic and onions of Egypt.
He who puts his hand to the plow and looks back like this is not fit for the kingdom Jesus said.
But let us look back like David to review the blessings of yesterday stored in the attic our memory, and let us praise God for His providence in guiding us as individuals and as a nation.
David was not one to live in the past, however, and think that all the good days are the good old days.
He is grateful for God's continuous providence, and so in verse 7 he expresses his thanks for the present.
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