Being Thankful for Grace
“Moreover the law entered, that the
offense might abound. But where sin abounded, grace did much
more abound” (Romans 5:20).
This is the day which Americans
set aside to reflect on the blessings of God which have been
showered on us in the previous year. All other holidays,
even Christmas and Easter, can be skewed into a
non-Christian meaning, but not Thanksgiving. Historically,
it was a time to give thanks to God for the bountiful
harvest, and experientially, while there are those to whom
we should give thanks for particular favors, there is only
one to whom we can give thanks for the blessings of life.
Nothing else makes sense.
Christians, of course, have much
more for which to give thanks than the non-believer, or at
least they have the eyes with which to see and the heart
with which to recognize God’s blessings. Indeed, Paul
instructs us that “In every thing [we should] give thanks:
for this is the will of God in Christ Jesus concerning
you” (I Thessalonians 5:18); the tense of the verb
implying a habitual, continual thanksgiving.
But specifically, we should be
thankful for His grace, which, as explained in our text,
completely overwhelmed our sin, and instead brought
salvation and freedom from guilt. “For by grace are ye
saved through faith; and that not of yourselves: it is the
gift of God” (Ephesians 2:8).
Note that in our text the word
“abound” appears three times. Both the offense and sin
exist in abundance. But the abundance of grace comes from a
different Greek word which means literally "to exist in
superabundance." But there is more. It is further
modified by the prefix “much-more,” implying a grace
that is beyond superabundance.
On this special day of
thanksgiving, let us not fail to include in those things for
which we are thankful, the overwhelmingly superabundant
grace of God. - From Days of Praise
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