Neal Pollard
In a time of restoration, Mattaniah and Bakbukiah led Judah in prayers of thanksgiving upon the completion of the wall around Jerusalem (Neh. 11:7). They recognized how much they owed God for His deliverance, guidance, and protection. They were a blessed remnant, sustained by His providence. They verbalized their thankfulness. Could they have done less than that?
Past to present the United States has been blessed with a material abundance that matches or exceeds any known in recorded history. Through war after war, the nation has been spared from its enemies. We have survived massive depressions, imposing threats to our freedom, periods of intense fear and sweeping doubt, and domestic disasters. In such an environment and through such providential protection from our Holy Creator, the New Testament church has taken root and spread throughout the nation for over two centuries. If not now, when has the Lord’s church had better opportunity to express our thanksgiving by righteous living and fervent evangelism? When has there ever been a time more pressing than now to declare the distinct message from heaven to modern man?
However, human nature has proven itself repeatedly to be disinclined toward service, sacrifice, and spirituality when material prosperity abounds. Perhaps a blessing in the recent economic downturn may be man’s more acute awareness of our need for God. Time will tell.
What cannot be missed is how faithfully God blesses humanity in a material way. Truly, God sheds some material blessings upon everyone. He gives to all life and breath and all things (Acts 17:25). “Every good thing given and every perfect gift is from above…” (Jas. 1:17). Jesus taught in the sermon on the mount that the Father “causes His sun to rise on the evil and the good, and sends rain on the righteous and the unrighteous” (Mat. 5:45). Repeatedly, scripture reminds the reader that there is no breath, no health, no potential for prosperity apart from the abundant, physical gifts from heaven. Simply being a human being qualifies one for some basic, material blessings.
God blesses His children in a special way. That is not a guarantee of wealth and prosperity, even if so many Christians in America may possess that. I have been to several nations where Christians live in subsistence, having food enough to fill a hungry belly once or twice a day, enjoying some kind of shelter, and owning maybe a change of clothes or two. Most of these brethren would consider themselves very blessed and have a positive, contented outlook on life. They view themselves as materially blessed. These brethren’s examples remind us that the truest treasures do not have a price tag on them, yet children of God have so frequently been the happy recipients of relative prosperity.
Despite the fact that God has richly blessed His children, ingratitude for material blessings has often been a spiritual plague. At Marah, a couple of day’s journey past the Red Sea whose waters had just been parted, the Israelites complained for lack of water. Marah literally meant bitter water, and for this reason Israel would not drink there. The Lord showed Moses a piece of wood which, after he threw it in the water, sweetened it. Then, Moses writes, “There the Lord made for them a statute and a rule, and there he tested them, saying, ‘If you will diligently listen to the voice of the Lord your God, and do that which is right in his eyes, and give ear to his commandments and keep all his statutes, I will put none of the diseases on you that I put on the Egyptians, for I am the Lord, your healer’” (Exo. 15:25b-26, ESV). Incidentally, a few miles later they came to a placed called Elim, “where there were twelve wells of water” (Exo. 15:27). They had seen physical deliverance a mere 72 hours before, but they lost faith in God’s ability to provide so quickly. Later on in the sermon on the mount, Jesus warned His disciples not to imitate such a display of doubt and distrust. He shows the foolishness and futility of worrying over material things, urging His disciples to instead seek the kingdom first in the full confidence of divine provision (Mat. 6:25-34). Therefore, as children of God should more fully and quickly trust God to provide for needs and necessities (cf. 1 Co. 10:10; Phi. 2:14), we should also be quick to recognize and be thankful for the material blessings we regularly receive.
Consider a few material blessings unique to those living the Christian life.
Long Life
Righteous people deliver stillborn children. Godly teenagers die in tragic accidents. Some wonderful Christian folks have had their lives dramatically shortened by terminal illness or untimely death. So, this blessing needs qualification. Solomon writes, “My son, do not forget my law, but let your heart keep my commands; for length of days and long life and peace they will add to you” (Pro. 3:2). This rule of thumb certainly has exceptions, like those already noted. Yet, the healthy lifestyle, management of stress and worry, and attitude that seeks to live and serve so long as God wills leads the righteous to a condition of life that lends itself to longevity. This is reiterated in Proverbs 3:16 (the companionship of long life and wisdom), Proverbs 9:11 (days multiplied through fear and knowledge), Proverbs 10:27 (the fear of the Lord prolongs days) and Proverbs 28:16 (those who hate unjust gain prolong their days).
True peace
There are a great many people in the world today who are disturbed and distressed, and many have not learned that this is very often a lack of true peace available only in Christ (John 14:27; cf. Phi. 4:7). Again, Solomon repeats the presence of peace in the lives of the righteous (3:17; 16:7). There is a false, self-deluding peace with which the ungodly numb themselves (cf. Jer. 8:11), but this is tantamount to building on the proverbial sand (cf. Mat. 7:26-27). Some nervous conditions with physical side-effects are no more than the outgrowth of a mind disturbed by ungodly, self-guided living. Christians may choose to give in to the sin of worry and sacrifice the peace of Christ, but they are surrendering a blessing that most rightly belongs to them. Peace is a spiritual blessing, but there are physical aspects to it.
Answered prayer
Though the blind man may have been speaking his own theology and not the Lord’s (John 9:31), Peter makes clear the principle that “the eyes of the Lord are on the righteous, and his ears are open to their prayer. But the face of the Lord is against those who do evil” (1 Pe. 3:12). Since the righteous have their desires properly trained (cf. Jas. 4:1-3), the desires they express to God are granted (Pro. 10:24). He hears the righteous’ prayers (Pro. 15:29). Literally, He listens with a yearning to grant our requests as it befits His own will. We pray for many spiritual things, but we also pray concerning physical matters. Prayers for health, job, the ability to provide for family, safe travel, births, marriages, and the like are bound up in the material as well as the spiritual.
Deliverance
Deliverance is a broad topic. David was delivered from the paw of the lion and the bear, and so this was deliverance from natural terrors. He was delivered from Goliath, Saul, and Absalom, deliverance from human threats and opposition. He was delivered from blood guiltiness and personal, egregious sin, and so deliverance from spiritual death. His son, Solomon, must have seen the after-effects of such deliverance in his father’s life. By righteous living, much trouble can be averted (Pro. 11:8). The early Christians suffered loss of life in the throes of persecution, but so often God has chosen to deliver His children’s lives. This is a material blessing each of us should take time to note.
It pays to be a Christian. It will pay eternally (Mat. 6:21; 25:46a), but it will also cause one to reap the dividends thereof in this life. There will be tears to sow, and though joy comes in the morning of eternity (Psa. 126:5) there will be blessings accompanying the righteous life which the unrighteous will not experience. Thank God for the hope and promise tied to the righteous life, a life of material as well as endless spiritual blessings.
