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Thanksgiving and Prayer - 2Thessalonians 1:1-12

Sunday, 10thSeptember, 2006

gThessalonica was the largest city of Macedonia in Paul’s day, It was a bustling sea port on the Egnatian Way and a road leading north. So it was a trading and commercial centre. Paul had spoken there and then left abruptly as we see in Acts 17:1-9. It is not clear whether Timothy stayed on but the small church of converts from paganism and a few converts from Judaism were struggling with their new found faith and persecution. Under persecution the church becomes more interested in Jesus’ second coming. The Thessalonians are no exception and in the first letter Paul is having to warn them that you cannot predict when Jesus will return. In the mean time we must live to please God and continue in work and so on.

 

In this second letter he continues the same themes as the first, which is encouraging persecuted believers, exhorting them to be steadfast and work for a living and correcting misunderstanding about the return of Jesus Christ.

 

gAn outline of the letter looks like this:

I           Greeting 1:1-2

II           Prayer 1:3-12

                    a) Thanksgiving 1:3-4

                    b) Divine Judgement 1:5-10

                    c) Content of prayer 1:11-12

III     The man of sin 2:1-12

IV           Thanksgiving and encouragement. 2:13-17

V       Pray for us for the Lord is faithful 3:1-5

VI           Discipline the idle 3:6-16

VII    Final Greeting 3:17-18

 

Today we look at the first chapter which is the greeting and the prayer. This is a common feature of letters of the day. Instead of “Dear Thessalonians, I hope you are well…. Letters began with who is was from, who it was to,  a greeting and some then got into the subject of the letter – more like a memo format then a letter format.

 

gSo lets read it. 2Thessalonians 1:1-12. page 1189 in the Church Bibles.

 

I Greeting 1:1-2

          1 Paul, Silas and Timothy,

          To the church of the Thessalonians in God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ:

          2 Grace and peace to you from God the Father and the Lord Jesus Christ.

A straightforward, standard greeting with one exception. Paul identifies the church as in God the Father and the Lord Jesus Christ and also wishes them grace and peace from God the Father and the Lord Jesus Christ.

II Prayer 1:3-12

a)Thanksgiving 1:3-4

          3 gWe ought always to thank God for you, Here is the starting point of Paul’s letter. Not a jump in with both feet, tell them how it is approach but one that we need to learn from. 

 

 brothers, and rightly so, g because your faith is growing more and more,

Paul looks to see progress in the Christian life and he finds growing faith. Faith, we said last week, is risk-taking. Testing out in obedience that God is faithful. We do not stand still in the Christian life, any more than a plant can stand still in the garden. It either grows or it withers and you consider a plant that is not developing to need attention. So it is with your spiritual life. Faith has to explore new areas of trust.  Discipleship takes faith beyond just trusting God for salvation to trusting him for living the new life in Christ.

 

 andg the love every one of you has for each other is increasing.

Here is the mark of the life of Jesus. Jesus said” By this shall all men know that you are my disciples. Again, it is an active love. It has to grow and develop and move on. Each of us develops as we learn to love each other in a deeper way – more of that later.

 4 Therefore, among God's churches we boast about your perseverance and faith in all the persecutions and trials you are enduring.  5 All this is evidence that God's judgment is right, and as a result you will be counted worthy of the kingdom of God, for which you are suffering.

Here is the first hint of both the problems the Thessalonians had and a very different perspective on life enjoyed by the early church. Perseverence here is being tested. The church is under pressure to conform to the norms of the society of the day and coercion, bullying, violence were all weapons of the enemies of jesus Christ. Paul , instead of a there, there, we are praying that God removes this trial, says he boasts about their endurance! Troubles are seem as evidence of God considering you worthy of them. Weak Christians have it easy, strong Christians have persecutions. On that basis we should look to the persecuted church for leadership rather than think of ourselves of the centre of Christianity. The church is strong in China, in Indonesia, in many other parts of the world. It is weak in Britian and particularly so in London.

         

 6 God is just: He will pay back trouble to those who trouble you 7 and give relief to you who are troubled, and to us as well.

Paul knows that God’s response is two-fold. We are to leave to him punishing our enemies. In our situation, the perceived fear of Islam should be understood that we are to love our enemies and do good to them. We do not fear them, we rather fear God. We leave him to deal with their judgment. Secondly God will bring relief but when and how?

This will happen when the Lord Jesus is revealed from heaven in blazing fire with his powerful angels. 8 He will punish those who do not know God and do not obey the gospel of our Lord Jesus. 9 They will be punished with everlasting destruction and shut out from the presence of the Lord and from the majesty of his power 10 on the day he comes to be glorified in his holy people and to be marvelled at among all those who have believed.

We must think long term, really long term. We are born by the Holy Spirit of God for eternal life. Paul, in Romans said “I consider the present sufferings nothing compared with the glory that is to come.” Notice the language they do not know God, they do not obey the gospel, they are shut out – this is not a vision of malevolence but of those who receive the consequences of their lives. On the other hand, savour this precious statement;  gThis includes you, because you believed our testimony to you.

In what you are included in:

1. gJesus will be revealed as a blazing fire – either destruction or warm and welcoming

2. gThe presence of the Lord – the preciousness of the “I will be with you always”

3. g The majesty of his power  - power here speaks of enabling God is not majestic because of his luxurious living but his active involvement in the salvation of a fallen world and you.

4. gHe is to be glorified by us – his holy people - gand to be marvelled at – This means spending time in worship at home and together in Church, Sunday morning, Sunday Evening, Powerhouse and House Group. Or have you lost it? Is this world and its false glitzy race for celebrity and wealth blinded you to the pleasure of spending time glorifying and marvelling at our Saviour and our God?

 

c) Content of prayer 1:11-12

Paul now turns to the content of his prayer having set it in context of the here now suffering and the here now glory of Jesus. SO what do I pray  when I pick up the prayer diary? Here is a pattern to help. Lets turn this from Paul telling us to us praying for each other.

gI pray, dear Father, that you may count _________ worthy of your calling, and that by your power you may fulfil every good purpose of _______ and every act prompted by his/her faith.  We pray this so that the name of you, our Lord Jesus may be glorified in him/her, and (s)he in you, according to your grace.

 

Count worthy might mean persecution but each of us has a calling and a destiny. The destiny is a seat in heaven with Jesus. For today he calls us to holiness and witness to his saving grace.

Pray for God to empower them to full his purpose in their lives. In worship, prayer, discipleship, telling other the good news, caring for others, fellowship and serving others by using the gifts he gives.

Every act prompted by faith. Faith that reaches out to God and takes risks that he might show his power.

Jesus glorified in you. You are a holy person – live as one. We are saved by grace and we live by grace but the proper response to grace is to seek the power of the Holy Spirit to live the lives that please God. Jesus id glorified every time your actions reflect his character and purpose.

So here is how we love one another more and more. By looking for faith and love in each other. By praying for the life of the Holy Spirit to be evident in the lives of others in the fellowship. By continuing the care that we are so good at but making it reach out of our immediate circle into the wider Christian community and out to the lost without Christ. Our love begins as we receive God’s love and we now are to remind ourselves of that love as it was expressed on the cross. We will glorify Jesus and marvel at him and his love and ask to receive from him and feed and drink from him that we may offer him back our lives.

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