“Do not worry about anything, but in everything by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made known to God.” The apostle Paul wrote these words to the people of Philippi in a letter that was filled with words of warm praise. While Paul found much to criticize among the people of Corinth and the people scattered throughout the Galatian region, Paul was delighted with how the Philippians had embraced the gospel and were living their faith.
What adds zest to these words is the fact that Paul wrote them while he languished in prison. Locked up, possibly even chained to a wall, Paul still managed to write “Don’t worry! Be thankful!” Despite his situation, the words reflect how Paul lived his faith: filled with trust, confidence, and hope.
Paul knew the inside of a cell all too well. He had a least three stays in prison, possibly as many as seven. He spent the last two years of his life imprisoned in Rome before he was executed. He probably wrote his letter to the Philippians during an earlier imprisonment, mostly likely during a two-year incarceration in Caesarea. Still, “Don’t worry; be thankful; lift up your concerns and requests to God.”
Paul lived in gratitude and thanksgiving even as he endured an arduous life. In addition to his numerous times in jail, he was beaten for his faith, shipwrecked, and was often mocked and laughed at. He had no permanent home from the time the scales fell from his eyes, living out of a suitcase as he traveled constantly to share the good news.
He saw every setting as an opportunity to share the gospel, even the inside of a prison cell. His calling was not to convert, but rather simply to share the good news of God’s grace and love revealed in Jesus Christ with any who would listen, including his jailers. Indeed, he told the Philippians, “I want you to know that what has happened to me has actually helped to spread the gospel, so that is has become known…that my imprisonment is for Christ.”
Paul helps us to learn to live our lives in gratitude to God for blessings small and large. And this life of gratitude and thanksgiving is not limited to the month of November, of course, but one we are called to live year-round. A 16th century prayer reminds us “not to be thankful when it pleaseth me, as if thy blessings, O Lord, had spare days.” For in Jesus Christ, we know that God does indeed “bless us and keep us” -- always and always.
Grace & peace
Pastor Skip