We tend to think about thankfulness as something we know we should have, especially in regard to the big blessings in life: family, spouse, friends, church, and so on, but it often remains a broad abstraction. Nevertheless, we think of it as something we do occasionally, while giving ourselves permission is the daily course of our lives to grumble and complain. In other words, the functional culture of our lives is frustration and ingratitude, even though we pledge to do better now and then.
Sometimes we hear calls to be thankful, we think, I could be thankful, if … but that is not being thankful, it is being entitled.
The ethical significance of thankfulness is a clear focus of the apostle Paul. In Ephesians 5:4, Paul writes, “Let there be no filthiness nor foolish talk nor crude joking, which are out of place, but instead let there be thanksgiving.” Instead of responding to the list of vices with corresponding virtues, Paul simply exhorts the church to offer “thanksgiving.” Thanksgiving is the pervading culture in which proper behavior operates. It is both a fruit of the gospel and the fuel of gospel-saturated holy living.
In Ephesians 5:3, Paul asserted that sexual immorality was rooted in covetousness and he goes on to explain that covetousness is idolatry (Eph. 5:5). Covetousness flows from a sense of entitlement and thankfulness is its opposite. Each possesses ethical consequences. The contrast Paul draws between the one who offers thanksgiving and one who worships idols is striking.
Editor’s Note: This article was originally published at davidprince.com.