KJV Sermon Outlines
Just Say Thanks!
Text: Philippians 4:6 “Be careful for nothing; but in every thing by
prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made
known unto God.”
Introduction: This week we will be celebrating another Christian
Holiday. The first Thanksgiving began when the Pilgrims settled in the
United States. They thanked God not the Indians for the bountiful
harvest.
I. God Remembers Every Time We Thank Him
Heb. 13:15 “By him therefore let us offer the sacrifice of praise to
God continually, that is, the fruit of our lips giving thanks to his
name.”
A. Gratitude Must Be Taught By Example.
B. You Can’t Out Give the Lord
C. You Can’t Out Thank the Lord
D. Starts Out As A Sacrifice
E. Are You Grateful for…
II. God Loves Gratitude
1 Thes. 5:18 “In every thing give thanks: for this is the will of God
in Christ Jesus concerning you.”
A. God Notices
B. The Pilgrims
C. God Reads your thoughts so why does He want you to thank Him?
D. There is no relationship in ease dropping.
E. He wants to hear the words spoken.
F. People like to be thanked.
III. God Hates Ingratitude
Luke 17:11-18 “And it came to pass, as he went to Jerusalem, that he
passed through the midst of Samaria and Galilee. 12And as he entered
into a certain village, there met him ten men that were lepers, which
stood afar off: 13And they lifted up their voices, and said, Jesus,
Master, have mercy on us. 14And when he saw them, he said unto them,
Go show yourselves unto the priests. And it came to pass, that, as
they went, they were cleansed. 15And one of them, when he saw that he
was healed, turned back, and with a loud voice glorified God, 16And
fell down on his face at his feet, giving him thanks: and he was a
Samaritan. 17And Jesus answering said, Were there not ten cleansed?
but where are the nine? 18There are not found that returned to give
glory to God, save this stranger. 19And he said unto him, Arise, go
thy way: thy faith hath made thee whole.”
A. God Notices
B. God will not continue to bless the unthankful.
C. You can’t out thank the Lord.
Ever hear the story about the young bride who caused a stir when her
new husband found her preparing their first Thanksgiving turkey by
cutting it in half?
"That's how Mama always did it," she said.
"That's how Grandma always did it," Mama said.
So they called Grandma. Grandma couldn't remember why the turkey was
cut in half. She thought back over all the past Thanksgivings. She
remembered the turkeys her mother had heaved out of the wide
old-fashioned oven in their cozy kitchen. Her mother had never cut the
turkey in half. But for at least 40 years, she and her children—and
now grandchildren—had been cutting their turkeys in half. When had
they decided it was better that way? Her mind kept going back to her
mother's kitchen . . . it was the oven! The first years of her
marriage her own oven was too small to accommodate a whole turkey.
Sometimes I wonder if our Thanksgiving turkey has been cut in half. In
the oven of multiculturalism, there has been less room for the
complete story of our nation's heritage. It's just not acceptable to
emphasize the role of faith in the first Thanksgiving. Yet that's what
it was all about. The faith of the first Thanksgiving celebrants was
as real as the bowls and baskets of food they prepared, as up close
and personal as the events that had led them to this moment, as
compelling as their pursuit of religious freedom.
Thanksgiving in a Nutshell
The story of the first Thanksgiving begins in 1608, when a group of
people called the Separatists, persecuted for forming a church apart
from the Church of England, left their homeland to settle in Leyden,
Holland. There they found religious freedom but also poverty, grueling
work and a secular culture that threatened to undo the values they had
carefully instilled in their children. After seeking God's guidance,
under the leadership of William Bradford they sold everything and, to
finance their journey, indentured themselves to an English company for
their first seven years in America. On the Mayflower, the Separatists
joined others seeking the new land for other reasons; these they
called the Strangers. These two groups, a passenger list of 102,
together were the Pilgrims.
The journey lasted nine weeks. Along the way their ship lost its
course and, instead of reaching Virginia, landed at Cape Cod, Mass.
This took the Pilgrims outside the territory covered by the King's
Charter, thus they were responsible for their own government. After
much prayer, the Pilgrims wrote a set of laws, called The Mayflower
Compact. Only after all had signed it, on Nov. 11, 1620, did they
leave the Mayflower to begin their new life at the place they named
Plymouth.
Half the Pilgrims died that first winter. The survivors clung to their
faith in God, and when the Mayflower returned to England the next
spring, not one Pilgrim chose to return. That spring the little colony
literally put down roots with the help of Squanto, an Indian who years
before had been kidnapped and taken to England, where he had learned
English and become a Christian. Squanto taught them how to grow corn,
use fertilizer, stalk deer and catch fish. William Bradford, the
governor, wrote of Squanto that he was "a special instrument sent of
God for their good beyond their expectations."
The first harvest brought plenty. In October, Gov. Bradford set aside
a day for everyone to thank God for meeting their needs through that
arduous year. Squanto, his chief, Massasoit, and other members of his
tribe were their invited guests. The Indians brought deer and turkeys,
while the Pilgrim women cooked vegetables and fruit pies.
Faith Above All
Which one of us in these far too comfortable times could imagine
freezing and starving through a harsh winter, losing half of our
community, then lifting such joyous celebration to God? What an
inspiring picture of our Christian faith.
Unfortunately, this picture is lost in the watered-down versions of
Thanksgiving that pass the tests of political correctness, including
those offered in recently published books and encyclopedias. In some
public school classrooms, children are taught that the Pilgrims
offered the first Thanksgiving to thank the Indians, or worse yet,
Mother Earth.
In many ways, our situation as Christians is drawing closer each year
to that of the English Separatists. As the Church of England at the
time disregarded biblical truths, our nation is no longer
acknowledging its spiritual history. We can't ignore our personal
responsibility to transmit our cultural heritage to the next
generation. It's a responsibility with many rewards.
Sharing our country's heritage will inspire and give meaning to your
children's lives, enriching the legacy of your own family as well as
that of our nation. But you need to know that heritage well to pass it
on. Check your library for books and encyclopedias published before
1970 to find the authentic history of our nation, as well as the
inseparable role of faith in our history.
As Woodrow Wilson said in 1913, "A nation which does not remember what
it was yesterday, does not know what it is today, nor what it is
trying to do. We are trying to do a futile thing if we do not know
where we came from or what we have been about.
"America was born a Christian nation. America was born to exemplify
that devotion to the elements of righteousness which are derived from
the revelations of Holy Scripture."
In short, America has always been a nation of faithful people. Now we
need faith that the current reign of revisionist history will be
followed by a remembrance of our authentic past. Until then it is our
responsibility to see that our legacy is not forgotten.
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