Presented to The Salvation Army Alberni Valley Ministries, 08 October 2023 and 09 October 2022, by Major Michael Ramsay
This is the 2023 version, to view the earlier version click here: https://sheepspeaks.blogspot.com/2022/10/deuteronomy-83-20-and-psalm-100.html
Deuteronomy 8 reminds us of an important truth that, Verse 3, because He loves us, God hungers us blessing us to rely on Him but, 8:10-11, as we enter times of abundance we must give thanks to the Lord because, 8:19-20, forgetting the Lord will result in our destruction.
The book of Deuteronomy here records the time after the Hebrews had fled Egypt and before they reached Canaan. They had only what they could carry and – as they were nomadic – obviously, no farms to grow food, no permanent water source or anything like that. They were hundreds, thousands or even more people without a permanent home wandering around the desert.
As the Hebrews followed God around the desert like this, He provided for them. Even their clothes did not wear out and their feet did not swell during this time. God provided for them when they had nothing. God provided for them. Deuteronomy 8:15,16:
He led you through the vast and dreadful desert, that thirsty and waterless land, with its venomous snakes and scorpions. He brought you water out of hard rock. He gave you manna to eat in the desert, something your fathers had never known, to humble and to test you so that in the end it might go well with you.
Even though one generation of Israelites was
faithless upon leaving Egypt their actions did not nullify the faithfulness of
God (Romans 3:3,4) who provided this desert experience as a means to their
salvation. The next generation, who was born in the desert, learned to rely on
God in their time of real need and God provided for them in the desert. God,
through Moses and then Joshua, reminded the people not to forget this: in the
desert God and God alone provided for them, preparing them to receive the
Promised Land.
But alas, as God warned them, these times of relying on God passed when the people acquired stability, income, relative ease and apparent self-sufficiency. They didn't think they needed Him once they settled in their promised land so they left Him and then they didn't have Him. And so when life's hard hand dealt them their blows they turned to look for God's protection but they had turned their backs, walked away and left Him behind. God didn't leave them. They left Him. They exchanged the safety of God's love for the death of wealth and the myth of self-sufficiency.
In our country too: Canada was arguably founded on the Word of God: notably Psalm 72:8: that is from where our old name came – when I was growing up this country was called the Dominion of Canada; Canada Day used to be called Dominion Day. We used to have the Lord's Prayer in Parliament and Gideon Bibles in the schools. Now we don't seem to think we need or want Him anymore.
This is sad but there is some good news. There
is still time to return to our Lord. As long as we exist as a nation there is
still the opportunity for our nation to return to acknowledging God. Now I am
not pretending that Canadians of the ‘olden days’ were better than today. We
made mistakes then, like we do now. We are making improvements and we are making
some serious errors. We are just people after all. The key is whether we try to
serve the Lord or not. He loves us and wants us on His team, as part of His
family. Maybe our country as a whole never will be. We, as Christians, however,
should do our best to help build God’s Kingdom here as it is in heaven, to help
bring people into the family of God’s love and support. We can do this by
continuing to serve God by taking care of our neighbour as well as reading our
Bibles and spending time in prayer with God and, of course, also sharing about
the blessings of doing all these things with others so they can experience it
as well. God loves us and as such He wants us all to be part of His Dominion.
As long as we exist it is not too late: we can all and each still return to the
Lord.
We know that Israel's Messiah did eventually come, even after all the unfaithfulness. Jesus is their and our Messiah. Jesus was born, died, and rose from the grave. And we know that Jesus will come back too and he will reign forever not only as King of the Jews but also as King of the whole world (cf. TSA doc. 6). When he does, will he find that we are walking with him or that we have walked away from Him and His Kingdom?
There is a children’s book, Thanksgiving Day
in Canada – it is a favourite book of mine. I have quoted it quite often
for many years when speaking about Thanksgiving in Canada – my children all
know the book very well too. As I have shared from the pulpit here on a
previous Thanksgivings, the other year I found out something very interesting.
You know that Susan, the kids and I lived and worked in Toronto prior to being
posted here. We were the Officers responsible for The Salvation Army`s
Warehouse Mission as well as 614 in downtown Toronto. One year during our time
there, with Thanksgiving coming up, I happened to be speaking with our worship
leader, Krys Lewicki, about the book and it turns out that he wrote that book
(it was promoted by CBC as part of Canada`s 125 anniversary). Krys also wrote a
Thanksgiving song that is in that book that we sang earlier and will probably
sing again before we leave. About Thanksgiving, from the book:
The origins of Canadian Thanksgiving are more closely connected to the traditions of Europe than of the United States. Long before Europeans settled in North America, festivals of thanks and celebrations of harvest took place in Europe in the month of October. The very first Thanksgiving celebration in North America took place in Canada when Martin Frobisher, an explorer from England, arrived in Newfoundland in 1578. He wanted to give thanks for his safe arrival to the New World. That means the first Thanksgiving in Canada was celebrated 43 years before the pilgrims landed in Plymouth, Massachusetts!
For a few hundred years, Thanksgiving was celebrated in either
late October or early November, before it was declared a national holiday in
1879. It was then, that November 6th was set aside as the official Thanksgiving
holiday. But then on January 31, 1957, Canadian Parliament announced that on
the second Monday in October, Thanksgiving would be "a day of general
thanksgiving to Almighty God for the bountiful harvest with which Canada has
been blessed."
Thanksgiving was moved to the second Monday in October because after the World Wars, Remembrance Day (November 11th) and Thanksgiving kept falling in the same week. Another reason for Canadian Thanksgiving arriving earlier than its American counterpart is that Canada is geographically further north than the United States, causing the Canadian harvest season to arrive earlier than the American harvest season. And since Thanksgiving for Canadians is more about giving thanks to the Lord for the harvest season than the arrival of pilgrims, it makes sense to celebrate the holiday in October.
In this day and age of the Holy being replaced
by the secular in so much of our society, it is a good encouragement to each of
us as individuals and as the Lord’s children here to remember that even our Parliament
once declared Thanksgiving as "a day of general thanksgiving to Almighty
God for the bountiful harvest with which Canada has been blessed."
This weekend and this day let us remember to offer thanksgiving to Almighty God for all else and for the bountiful harvest with which we have been blessed.
Let us pray.