Survey of the Letters of Paul:  1 Timothy 4:4

For every creature of God is good, and nothing to be refused, if it be received with thanksgiving:

We will begin in the Barclay's commentary...

I will begin with the text from Barclay's that I read as the introduction to our lesson on Verse 3 as it applies to what we will discuss today.  I will then read a bit more of the commentary that was written for the first five verses.

INSULTING GOD
THE heretics of Ephesus were teaching a heresy with very definite consequences for life. As we have already seen, these heretics were Gnostics; and the essence of Gnosticism was that spirit is altogether good and matter altogether evil. One of the consequences was that there were some who preached that everything to do with the body was evil and that everything in the world was evil. In Ephesus, this resulted in two definite errors. The heretics insisted that people must, as far as possible, abstain from food, for food was material and therefore evil; food ministered to the body, and the body was evil. They also insisted that people must abstain from marriage, for the instincts of the body were evil and must be entirely suppressed.

This was a constantly recurring heresy in the Church; in every generation, there were some who tried to be stricter than God. When the Apostolic Canons came to be written, it was necessary to set it down in black and white: ‘If any overseer, priest or deacon, or anyone on the priestly list, abstains from marriage and flesh and wine, not on the ground of asceticism [ə-sĕt'ĭ-sĭz'əm - extreme self-denial] (that is, for the sake of discipline), but through abhorrence of them as evil in themselves, forgetting that all things are very good, and that God made man male and female, but blaspheming and slandering the workmanship of God, either let him amend, or be deposed and cast out of the Church. Likewise a layman also’ (Apostolic Canons, 51). Irenaeus, the Bishop of Lyons, writing towards the end of the second century, tells how certain followers of Saturninus ‘declare that marriage and generation are from Satan. Many likewise abstain from animal food, and draw away multitudes by a feigned temperance of this kind’ (Against Heresies, 1:24:2) This kind of thing reached its peak in the fourth century. At that time, monks went away and lived in the Egyptian desert, entirely cut off from other people. They spent their lives in self-denial and physical deprivation. One never ate cooked food and was famous for his ‘fleshlessness’. Another stood all night by a jutting crag so that it was impossible for him to sleep. Another was famous because he allowed his body to become so dirty and neglected that vermin dropped from him as he walked. Another deliberately ate salt in midsummer and then abstained from drinking water. ‘A clean body’, they said, ‘necessarily means an unclean soul.’ ~Barclays commentary

This is where we ended in the Barclay's last time.  Continuing...


The answer to those who lived in this way was that, by doing things like that, they were insulting God – for he is the creator of the world, and repeatedly his creation is said to be good. ‘God saw everything that he had made, and indeed it was very good’ (Genesis 1:31). ‘Every moving thing that lives shall be food for you’ (Genesis 9:3). ‘God created humankind in his image . . . male and female he created them. God blessed them, and God said to them, “Be fruitful and multiply, and fill the earth” ’ (Genesis 1:27–8).

But all God’s gifts have to be used in a certain way.

(1) They have to be used in the memory that they are gifts of God. There are things which come to us so unfailingly that we begin to forget that they are gifts and begin to take them as rights. We are to remember that all that we have is a gift from God and that there is not a living thing which could have life without him.

(2) They have to be used in sharing. All selfish use is forbidden. No one can monopolize God’s gifts; everyone must share them.

(3) They are to be used with gratitude. Grace is always to be said before a meal. The Jews always said grace. They had a grace for different things. When they ate fruit, they said: ‘Blessed art thou, King of the Universe, who createst the fruit of the tree.’ When they drank wine, they said: ‘Blessed art thou, King of the Universe, who createst the fruit of the vine.’ When they ate vegetables, they said: ‘Blessed art thou, King of the Universe, who createst the fruit of the earth.’ When they ate bread, they said: ‘Blessed art thou, King of the Universe, who bringest forth bread from the ground.’

True Christians do not serve God by enslaving themselves with rules and regulations and insulting his creation; they serve him by gratefully accepting his good gifts and remembering that this is a world where God made all things well, and by never forgetting to share God’s gifts with others. ~Barclay's Commentary

We discussed in the lesson on verse 3, in addition to clean and unclean meats, that God made all things.  We are not to condemn unclean animals simply because we do not eat them.  Despite being unclean, they have purpose and God is to be praise for everyone and everything to which He gives purpose.

Now to the commentaries:

First from John Gill:

For every creature of God is good - For food; and should be taken and used for that purpose, at all times, without distinction; even every creature which is made for food, and which is easy to be discerned by men:

Note: Do you see how that commentary is structured?  It is not saying that all creatures are good for food.  It is saying that all creatures good for food should be taken and used for that purpose.  The commentary says it is easy to be discerned by men, which is to say that clean food is easy to be discerned.

and nothing to be refused - or rejected as common and unclean, or to be abstained from at certain times:

Note: This is speaking to the idea of condemning unclean creatures as having no purpose.  Pigs and crabs and lobsters have a purpose and we should give God acknowledgement and thanks for them.

if it be received with thanksgiving - if not, persons are very ungrateful, and very unworthy of such favours; and it would be just in God to withhold them from them; and this they may expect at his hands, who reject them with contempt, or receive them with unthankfulness, or abstain from them in a religious way he never enjoined. ~John Gill

Note:  Again speaking to the purpose of the various elements of creation.

Now from Barnes Notes. This one will confirm what we discussed from John Gill.

For every creature of God is good - Greek, “all the creatures, or all that God has created” - pan ktisma: that is, as he made it; compare Genesis 1:10, Genesis 1:12, Genesis 1:18, Genesis 1:31 [these all speak to God stating that everything He made was good]. It does not mean that every moral agent remains good as long as he is “a creature of God,” but moral agents, human beings and angels, were good as they were made at first; Genesis 1:31. Nor does it mean that all that God has made is good “for every object to which it can be applied.” It is good in its place; good for the purpose for which he made it. But it should not be inferred that a thing which is poisonous in its nature is good for food, “because” it is a creation of God. It is good only in its place, and for the ends for which he intended it. Nor should it be inferred that what God has made is necessarily good “after” it has been perverted by man. As God made it originally, it might have been used without injury.

Quoted verse:
Genesis 1:31 And God saw every thing that he had made, and, behold, it was very good. And the evening and the morning were the sixth day.

Apples and peaches were made good, and are still useful and proper as articles of food; rye and Indian-corn are good, and are admirably adapted to the support of man and beast, but it does not follow that all that “man” can make of them is necessarily good. He extracts from them a poisonous liquid, and then says that “every creature of God is good, and nothing to be refused.” But is this a fair use of this passage of Scripture? True, they “are” good - they “are” to be received with gratitude as he made them, and as applied to the uses for which he designed them; but why apply this passage to prove that a deleterious [harmful] beverage, which “man” has extracted from what God has made, is good also, and good for all the purposes to which it can be applied? As “God” made these things, they are good. As man perverts them, it is no longer proper to call them the “creation of God,” and they may be injurious in the highest degree. This passage, therefore, should not be adduced to vindicate the use of intoxicating drinks. As employed by the apostle, it had no such reference, nor does it contain any “principle” which can properly receive any such application.

And nothing to be refused - Nothing that God has made, for the purposes for which he designed it. The necessity of the case the “exigency of the passage” - requires this interpretation. It “cannot” mean that we are not to refuse poison if offered in our food, or that we are never to refuse food that is to us injurious or offensive; nor can it anymore mean that we are to receive “all” that may be offered to us as a beverage. The sense is, that as God made it, and for the purposes for which he designed it, it is not to be held to be evil; or, which is the same thing, it is not to be prohibited as if there were merit in abstaining from it. It is not to be regarded as a religious duty to abstain from food which God has appointed for the support of man.

If it be received with thanksgiving - see the Ephesians 5:20 note; Philippians 4:6 note; 1 Corinthians 10:31 note.

Quoted verses [emphasis mine]:
Ephesians 5:20
Giving thanks always for all things unto God and the Father in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ;

Philippians 4:6
Be careful for nothing; but in every thing by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made known unto God.

1 Corinthians 10:31
Whether therefore ye eat, or drink, or whatsoever ye do, do all to the glory of God.

By understanding this verse 4, we begin to get an enhanced perspective on Thankfulness.  I want to focus on this for the rest of the lesson.

Ephesians 5:20
Giving thanks always for all things unto God and the Father in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ;

For all things - One effect would be to make us feel a deeper interest in the condition of our fellow creatures. Another would be to elevate and enlarge our conceptions of the goodness of God - directing the mind to all the favors which he has bestowed on the race. Man has much for which to be grateful; and the duty of acknowledging the mercy of God to the race should not be forgotten. We are often prone so to magnify our calamities, and to contemplate the woes of the race, that we overlook the occasions for gratitude; and we should, therefore, look upon the “mercies” which we enjoy as well as the miseries which we endure, that our hearts may be right. He who looks only on his trials will soon find his mind soured and complaining; he who endeavors to find how many occasions for gratitude he has, will soon find the burden of his sorrows alleviated, and his mind tranquil and calm. Yet, if the words here are to be taken as in our translation, “for all things.” they are full of force and beauty. At the close of life, and in [the Kingdom], we shall see occasion to bless God for all his dealings with us. We shall see that we have not suffered one pang too much, or been required to perform one duty too severe. We shall see that all our afflictions, as well as our mercies were designed for our good, and were needful for us. Why then should we not bless God in the furnace as well as in the palace; on a bed of pain as well as on a bed of down; in want as well as when sitting down at the splendid banquet? God knows what is best for us; and the way in which he leads us, mysterious though it seem to be now, will yet be seen to have been full of goodness and mercy. ~Barnes Notes

Philippians 4:6
Be careful for nothing; but in every thing by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made known unto God.

Be careful for nothing - That is, be not anxious or solicitous about the things of the present life. The word used here - merimnate - does not mean that we are to exercise no care about worldly matters - no care to preserve our property, or to provide for our families (compare 1 Timothy 5:8); but that there is to be such confidence in God as to free the mind from anxiety, and such a sense of dependence on him as to keep it calm; see the subject explained in the notes on Matthew 6:25. ~Barnes Notes

Quoted verses:
1 Timothy 5:8
But if any provide not for his own, and specially for those of his own house, he hath denied the faith, and is worse than an infidel.

Matthew 6:25
Therefore I say unto you, Take no thought for your life, what ye shall eat, or what ye shall drink; nor yet for your body, what ye shall put on. Is not the life more than meat, and the body than raiment?

Now still in Philippians 4:6 commentary...

But in everything - Everything in reference to the supply of your wants, and the wants of your families; everything in respect to afflictions, embarrassments, and trials; and everything relating to your spiritual condition. There is nothing which pertains to body, mind, estate, friends, conflicts, losses, trials, hopes, fears, in reference to which we may not go and spread it all out before the Lord.

By prayer and supplication - The word rendered “supplication” is a stronger term than the former [prayer]. It is the mode of prayer which especially arises from the sense of “need,” or “want” - from deomai, “to want, to need.”

With thanksgiving - Thanksgiving connected with prayer. We can always find something to be thankful for, no matter what may be the burden of our wants, or the special subject of our petitions. When we pray for the supply of our wants, we may be thankful for that kind providence which has hitherto befriended us; when we pray for restoration from sickness, we may be thankful for the health we have hitherto enjoyed, and for God’s merciful interposition in the former days of trial, and for his goodness in now sparing our lives; when we pray that our children and friends may be preserved from danger and death, we may remember how often God has interposed to save them; when, oppressed with a sense of sin, we pray for pardon, we have abundant cause of thanksgiving that there is a glorious way by which we may be saved. The greatest sufferer that lives in this world of redeeming love, and who has the offer of [the Kingdom] before him, has cause of gratitude.

Let your request be made known unto God - Not as if you were to give him information, but to express to him your wants. God needs not to be informed of our necessities, but he requires that we come and express them to him; compare Ezekiel 36:37 which read, “Thus saith the Lord God, I will yet for this be inquired of by the house of Israel to do it for them.” ~Barnes Notes

1 Corinthians 10:31
Whether therefore ye eat, or drink, or whatsoever ye do, do all to the glory of God.

Do all to the glory of God - The phrase “the glory of God” is equivalent to the honor of God; and the direction is, that we should so act in all things as to “honor” him as our Lawgiver, our Creator, our Redeemer; and so as to lead others by our example to praise him and to embrace His gospel. A child acts so as to honor a father when he always cherishes reverential and proper thoughts of him; when he is thankful for his favors; when he keeps his laws; when he endeavors to advance his plans and his interests; and when he so acts as to lead all around him to cherish elevated opinions of the character of a father. He “dishonorers” him when he has no respect to his authority; when he breaks his laws; when he leads others to treat him with disrespect. In like manner, we live to the glory of God when we honor him in all the relations which he sustains to us; when we keep his laws; when we partake of his favors with thankfulness, and with a deep sense of our dependence; when we pray unto him; and when we so live as to lead those around us to cherish elevated conceptions of his goodness, and mercy, and holiness. Whatever plan or purpose will tend to advance His kingdom, and to make him better known and loved, will be to His glory. We may observe in regard to this:

(1) That the rule is “universal.” It extends to everything. If in so small matters as eating and drinking we should seek to honor God, assuredly we should in all other things.

(2) it is designed that this should be the constant rule of conduct, and that we should be often reminded of it. The acts of eating and drinking must be performed often; and the command is attached to that which must often occur, that we may be often reminded of it, and that we may be kept from forgetting it.

(3) it is intended that we should honor God in our families and among our friends. We eat with them; we share together the bounties of Providence; and God designs that we should honor Him when we partake of His mercies, and that thus our daily enjoyments should be sanctified by a constant effort to glorify Him.

(4) we should devote the strength which we derive from the bounties of His hand to His honor and in His service. He gives us food; He makes it nourishing; He invigorates our frame; and that strength should not be devoted to purposes of sin, and profligacy, and corruption. it is an act of high dishonor to God, when he gives us strength, that we should at once devote that strength to pollution and to sin.

(5) this rule is designed to be one of the chief directors of our lives. It is to guide all our conduct, and to constitute a “test” by which to try our actions. Whatever can be done to advance the honor of God is right; whatever cannot be done with that end is wrong. Whatever plan a man can form that will have this end is a good plan; whatever cannot be made to have this tendency, and that cannot be commended, continued, and ended with a distinct and definite desire to promote His honor, is wrong, and should be immediately abandoned.

(6) what a change would it make in the world if this rule were every where followed! How differently would even professing Christians live! How many of their plans would they be constrained at once to abandon! And what a mighty revolution would it at once make on earth should all the actions of people begin to be performed to promote the glory of God! ~Barnes Notes

Let me boil all this commentary on thankfulness down and put it into my words.  When it comes to Thankfulness, I believe we are missing both the broader perspective and the many opportunities for not just being thankful but putting God in everything.    The scriptures we just read say:

"give thanks always for all things."
"in everything by prayer and supplication."
"and do all to the glory of the Lord."

This means everything.  Everything we do, think and plan.  Every action, every event and every situation, whether they be good, bad or mundane.  If I can be so bold, we have but three types of actions in our lives:

1] Actions based on good decisions and laws [physical and spiritual].
2] Actions based on bad decisions and the breaking of laws [physical and spiritual].
3] All the mundane [commonplace] life actions--eating, sleeping, daily chores, personal hygiene and constant body eliminations [going to the restroom].

God wants and demands that we have Him in the forefront of all three types.  When we follow a law or command of God and reap success, we must give both thanks and glory to God.  When we reap the consequences of sin or a bad decision we have to acknowledge God and give Him glory for having those consequences in place.  They lead me back to Him and the path He has me walking.  We also cannot take the commonplace actions for granted.  Thank God we have something to eat, thank God for sweet sleep and thank God for accomplishment in daily chores.  Acknowledge and give thanks and glory to God that this body can be physically cleaned and that He has a bodily function in place to eliminate body wastes [thank God for the toilet]!!

I suppose it is easy to thank God and give Him glory when we are full of happiness, contentment and enjoying pleasure and success but we must have this same thankfulness, acknowledgement and glory to God in our trials, tribulations, negative consequences and hardships.  He has purpose in setting all of these up in His plan for us and in His laws and ways.

Verse 4 says in essence, "For every thing of God is good and nothing of His is to be condemned or rejected if we understand it, receive it and acknowledge Him in all these things and give Him both thanks and glory for them."

Do all to the glory of God.  Give Him the glory in equal measures for both the success and the hardship; for both the blessing and the trial and for both the dynamic and the mundane situations of our lives.  This is the lesson we find in 1 Timothy 4 and verse 4.
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                       

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