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The Impossible Is Indispensable Series
Contributed by Glenn Pease on Apr 7, 2021 (message contributor)
Summary: Certainly all of us have had the experience of not knowing how to express our gratitude. Thanks sometimes seems so inadequate, and even when we add thanks so very much, and thanks a million, it leaves us with a sense of having very poorly expressed how we feel.
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The concept of the impossible changes from generation to
generation. Much of what we do today was once thought to be
impossible. Because of this, we are more cautious today in what we
include in the category of the impossible. We are no longer quick to
say it can't be done. What is apparently impossible no longer causes
a defeatist attitude in which no attempt is even made. Men go ahead
and often discover that what was thought to be impossible is not
only possible, but even indispensable to further progress. To
attempt the impossible is essential for growth in the scientific, social,
and spiritual realms, for in each we find that what is apparently
impossible is absolutely indispensable. We know for example that
deadly poisons such as sodium and chlorine are incompatible with life,
and yet, their combination which makes salt is necessary for life.
In other words, the very elements that can make the ongoing of life
impossible are indispensable for the ongoing of life.
We know that oxygen is highly flammable, and is essential to the
existence of fire, and that hydrogen will also readily burn.
A commonsense conclusion based on these facts would be,
that it is impossible to put out a fire with two such flammable gases,
but in reality, they are the two most indispensable fire fighting
elements, for their combination makes H20, or water. So we add
two poisons and get life preserving salt; we add two flammable
gases, and get a fire extinguisher.
Physical reality is filled with mysterious paradoxes, and so it
ought not be surprising when we find them in the spiritual realm.
The cross is the most magnificent of paradoxes. This greatest of
man's acts of evil and hatred is the means whereby God redeemed us
from evil and hate. It is both a symbol of man's sin, and of God's
salvation. Life from death would seem to be impossible, but the
death of Christ was indispensable if we were to have eternal life. In
all realms of reality we find that the paradoxical and apparently
impossible are very real. In verse 9 Paul is speaking of an
indispensable impossibility in the Christian life, for in this verse he
brings out the fact that-
I. IT IS IMPOSSIBLE TO EXPRESS AN ADEQUATE THANKS TO GOD.
Alfred Plummer in his study of the Greek says, "The question
implies that an adequate thanksgiving is impossible." When Paul
heard the good news that these Christians did not lose their faith
when confronted with temptation and tribulation, he was so
overjoyed he was tongue-tied in the presence of God. He didn't
know what to say because he was so thankful.
Certainly all of us have had the experience of not knowing how to
express our gratitude. Thanks sometimes seems so inadequate, and
even when we add thanks so very much, and thanks a million, it
leaves us with a sense of having very poorly expressed how we feel.
How much more impossible is it to express our thanks to God for
His mercy, love, and blessings? Paul had this experience time and
time again, and on one occasion when he was considering the
greatest of all God's gifts, he burst out with a shout, "Thanks be to
God for His inexpressible gift." The point is, Paul knew it was
impossible to ever thank God enough. He knew there was no way
that human language could adequately express the thanks due unto
God, but he did not let the fact that it was impossible stop him from
making the attempt. On the contrary, thanksgiving was an
indispensable part of his life.
The gift of God was inexpressible, but that did not stop Paul from
spending his whole life trying to express it. Paul could never thank
God enough for the way He used him to establish churches and win
men to Christ, but he never ceased to try.
Rom. 1:8, "I thank my God through Jesus Christ for you all...."
I Cor. 1:4, "I thank my God always on your behalf..."
Eph. 1:16, "..Cease not to give thanks for you, making mention of
you in my prayers."
Phil. 1:3, "I thank my God upon every remembrance of you."
Col. 1:3, "We give thanks to God....praying always for you."
I Thess. 5:18, "In everything give thanks, for this is the will of
God...."
Paul knew it was impossible to be thankful enough, but
nevertheless, it is indispensable in the life of one who loves Christ.
Paul was a grateful man, and that is why he was a great man. Paul
was never complaining in spite of all the problems he had. He was
so busy attempting to express the inexpressible, and do the
impossible, there was no time left for negative trivialities.
When thou hast truly thanked thy God