Summary: This was David's song, and if we see life whole and see the infinite realm of the non-existent and non-happenings of life, we to will have a song of praise and a heart of gratitude regardless of life's troubles and trials.

Sometimes we get so wrapped up in being occupied with what happens that we forget that

there is so much to be thankful for because of what doesn't happen. For example: Peter

Marshall died of a heart attack as a middle aged man with great potential ahead of him as

Chaplain of the Senate and popular Washington pastor. It was a tragedy, and Catherine

Marshall has written much about the horrible grief and agony of adjustment, but she has

also written about the marvelous blessing of what did not happen to Peter Marshall. This

puts even the tragedy into a new light.

As a young man he was taking a short cut one dark night through unfamiliar territory.

He did not realize how dark it was. He suddenly heard someone call his name. He stopped

and took a few more steps, and then he heard it again. He stopped completely still and tried

to peer into the darkness. It was so scary, for he could not see anything. He fell to his knees

and began to feel around him, and to his shock he discovered that he was right on the brink

of an abandoned stone quarry. One more step and he would have plummeted to his death.

There was never a doubt in his mind that God had spoken and spared his life. By grace all

that he did for the rest of his life was made possible. Later a car killed a friend he was

walking with, but it missed him. He was spared again. Another time a plane crashed that he

had missed, and a boat caught on fire 10 miles out to sea, and he was again spared.

The point is that though he died so young, he didn't die so much younger, which he easily

could have done. He lived long enough by the grace of God so that his early death was a

shock and a loss to the whole Christian world. His life has had one of the greatest impacts on

America than that of any preacher in this century. And it was all because of what did not

happen. It makes me think again of the book of Ruth where, if Elimelech would have died

sooner, Naomi would never have been in Moab to meet Ruth. If her sons would have died

sooner she never would have been Ruth's mother-in-law, and all of the influence of Naomi

and Ruth on history would never have been.

It was what did not happen that made possible all that did happen. We need to balance

out life and its problems by looking at what did not happen as well as what did. It is the

non-events that help us see the happenings from a broader perspective. They add light to

the darkness, and give meaning to what otherwise may seem senseless. In almost every

negative event of life you can find something that did not happen that enables you to have a

basis for thanksgiving.

Your life and mine only have meaning right now because of what did not happen. It is

not likely any of us would be alive today had certain things happened in the past that did not.

One of our members told of an event in his younger years where he was working and a man

pulled a large knife on him and threatened him. The adrenaline poured into his body and he

was so angry that he grabbed a clever and so frightened the man that he fled at such a pace

that he didn't even open the screen door but went right through it. That story could have

had a different ending with him on the floor stabbed to death. But that did not happen, and

that non-happening is the basis for his great thanksgiving.

We all have stories that could, with just slight changes in the timing, have led us to an

early grave. We are only here because of many things that never happened. That is what

David is thanking God for in verse 3 of Psa. 30. "O Lord, you brought me up from the

grave; you spared me from going down into the pit." David was alive and well, and he was

praising God because of what did not happen. This theme of negative thankfulness runs all

through this Psalm. In verse 1 David exalts God for what God did not let happen. One of

David's great fears never materialized. He dreaded to have his enemies gloat over him, but

he thanks God that it never happened. He not only didn't die physically, but he didn't die

psychologically or emotionally. I can just imagine David saying, "If that ever happened to

me I would just die." But it didn't happen, and he is grateful for that which never was.

Count your blessings we say, and rightly so, but when you are done with this list you have

not scratched the surface of all you have for which to be thankful. The list of things that are

blessings because they never happened is near infinite.

Paul gives us a couple of examples of negative thanksgiving. In Rom. 14:6 he describes to

Christians who are thankful for opposite things. He says, "He who eats meat, eats to the

Lord, for he gives thanks to God; and he who abstains, does so to the Lord and gives

thanks." One is thankful he eats meat, and the other is thankful he does not. Both are

thankful they are not like the other one.

Have you ever said that I am thankful I am not like so and so? That is legitimate, but it is

also legitimate if they are thankful they are not like you. There are endless numbers of

things that make people different, and we can be grateful for these differences we do not

possess. I can be thankful I am not as tall as Wilt Chamberlain, or as short as Micky

Rooney. But the can be equally grateful they are not as commonplace as I am. This life has

endless non-realities and non-events for which we can be thankful.

Paul looked at the mess in the Corinthian church and all of the division that had come

over personality clashes within the church, and he writes in I Cor. 1:14-15, "I am thankful

that I did not baptize any of you accept Crispus and Gaius, so no one can say that you are

baptized into my name." Imagine that! Paul is being thankful for what never happened,

even though it would seem to be a positive thing if it had happened. What if he had baptized

a hundred members of that church? It sounds like something he could have been proud of,

but instead he is grateful that it never happened, for this non-happening prevented his

success being used for the negative purpose of raising up a competitive cult in his name.

This opens endless doors of potential gratitude. How many wonderful things have never

happened to you for which you ought to be grateful? What if my father was a millionaire

and I would have inherited it and became a rich playboy with no thought of God, but totally

devoted to self-pleasure? I would have missed the love of Christ and service for His kingdom,

and the precious hope of eternal life in the family of God. Not only is life filled

with endless negatives that never happened, but it is filled with endless positives and

successes that never happened that could have led us to miss God's best. Thank God for all

the burdens and all the blessings that never happened that could have been enemies of my

best self. If we only knew, we could even thank God for prayers that were never answered.

Paul could look back and say that had I been more successful I could have baptized many

more people, but thank God that never happened, for in the long run less was better, and

failure was my success. If Christians were successful in everything they did, they would

never move on to other challenges God wants them to tackle. That is why even non-success

and non-happening of good things can be a reason for thanksgiving. What didn't happen

was even a basis for the thanksgiving of Christ. He prayed in Luke 10:21, "I thank you

Father, Lord of heaven and earth because you have hidden these things from the wise and

learned, and revealed them to little children."

Jesus was grateful that God did not operate on the same level as the world. He did not

give priority to those with power and learning, but rather to the innocent and helpless. In

other words, thank God that the Christmas story was not given to the king or high priest, but

to the lowly shepherds. What God does not do in history is almost as marvelous as what He

does do. This means that there is no end of things that never happen for which we can be

thankful. Jesus was not born in a palace. He never joined the ranks of the official religious

leaders of Israel. He never became a legalist like the Pharisees. He never fell for the lures of

Lucifer. He never gave up on His disciples. He never took the easy way out when He faced

the cross. The things that never happened in the life of Jesus are the foundation for all our

thanksgiving.

Life is not only full of things for which to give thanks, but it is also empty of things for

which to give thanks. Everyone has their problems, but if you add up all the problems, trials,

and diseases, and then count how many of them you don't have you will be overwhelmed by

the multitude of non-happenings for which you ought to be grateful. Richard Armor gives a

trivial example that illustrates just how near infinite the realm of negative thanksgiving can

be.

"Make yourself at home," I'm urged

By hosts when I'm a guest,

But I am very careful not

To do as they suggest.

For if I did, I'd take off coat

And tie and also shoes,

And put my feet up on a chair

And take a little nooze.

And then I'd turn the TV on

To something they'd find hateful.....

No, I won't make myself at home

For which they should be grateful."

Author Unknown

Thank God for all the people who do not take you literally and follow through on your

offer to make themselves at home. The point is, from the trivial to the tremendous we have

an endless resource of thanksgiving in the realm of the negative, which are the things that

are not, were not, and never will be. These negatives of life are not all absolutely non-events,

however. Sometimes they are only relatively so, and so we want to look at the 2 categories of

non-happenings that David deals with in Psa. 30.

I. NEGATIVES THAT ARE PREVENTED.

President McKinley developed a custom of always wearing a pink carnation in his

buttonhole. His wife raised them at the White House. Wherever he traveled he always gave

his carnation to the engineer of the train. He would walk up to the engineer and lift the pink

flower into the grimy hands of the engineer and say, "I sincerely thank you for your skill and

my safety." He was being thankful for what was prevented. Every time we take a trip and

get back safely we can be thankful for what was prevented. This of course is a major part of

David's thanksgiving. He was spared from disgrace and humiliation, and from fatal disease.

These evils never happened because they were prevented.

This always has been, and always will be, the best kind of negative non-event. The next

best is the second category we will be looking at, which is negatives that do happen but do not

last. For example, the getting sick but then being healed. It is better to prevent the sickness,

for you can't beat staying well, but it is also a great second best to be healed and restored to

health when you do get sick. Prevention is total non-happening of the negative, and this is

the best source for gratitude. We can learn from suffering, even as Jesus did, but thank God

we do not have to learn everything by the negative of suffering. God prevented Jesus from

having to learn by being born with handicaps. He was prevented from having to endure

diseases of all kinds. He was prevented from being made a slave, or of having to grow up as

an orphan. Jesus missed a multitude of negatives, and so it is with all of us.

Preventative medicine alone has blest most of our lives. Many of us escaped the diseases

that killed children by the thousands because we were given shots. Thank God for the evils

and sufferings that never happened because they are prevented. Prevention does not make

the headlines, for non-events do not make news, but the fact is, the non-events of life are

some of the best news. It would be a marvelous headline that would say, "Fifteen million

babies do not have polio this year." We need to be reminded of all the evils that have been

prevented to have a totally thankful perspective. The prevention of one evil can lead to the

prevention of other evils, and so one non-event can lead to another non-event.

For example: "In 1874 a young Texas doctor named John Burke treated a patience

suffering from typhoid fever. The patient recovered and, upon leaving, promised the doctor

that he would some day repay him. After a few years the doctor moved to another town.

One day when walking to his office, he noticed a group of horseman heading towards the

bank. He realized that they were robbers and that the leader was his former patient. After a

few minutes of pleading by the doctor that he and the entire town would suffer if the men

carried out their plan. The band of men rode out of town on their leader's orders. With

this, the patient had repaid his long-overdue debt. The bandit leader was none other than

Frank James, brother of the notorious outlaw Jesse James." Because Frank James didn't

die a bank robbery didn't happen. The prevention of his death led to gratitude that

prevented the robbery. Every evil prevented leads to, who knows, how many other evils that

never happen?

There is no way to calculate how many things are not happening every day in our lives,

and in our world, because they are prevented. You can focus on the problems that were not

prevented and get discouraged, or you can begin to count that innumerable list of burdens

you did not have to carry, and see that negative thanksgiving becomes a basis for rejoicing

even when all is not well. We must be constantly aware of just how little we really know

about the future. We jump to conclusions all the time because we assume that we know that

certain non-events will be destructive to our future.

Naomi had a plan. She was going to get Ruth to go back to Moab, and she would be free

of all responsibility. She failed to achieve her goal, however, and Ruth refused to go back.

What she longed for did not happen, but this non-event, the thing she sought for, was the

best thing that never happened to Naomi. Had it happened she and Ruth would have

separated and gone into oblivion and played no roll in God's plan. It was this non-event that

led to her greatest success. Thank God for things that do not happen. Naomi and Ruth had

a future filled with thankfulness because God prevented Naomi from doing things in her

grief that would have defeated His best for them both.

The point is, you do not know which is best for you. Is it failure or success? So when the

dream you have does not happen, and the goal you set does not materialize, do not give up

hope, for the non-happening may yet be the basis for your thanksgiving. Give God time to

show you how even the negatives of life can prevent you from missing the positives that He

has waiting for you. Both good things and bad things that do not happen can be the best

things that never happened to you.

Lavonne and I have thanked God so many times for one of the best things that never

happened to me. Had we gotten the service we wanted at a drive in one summer night my

friends and I might never have gotten impatient and gone to another town down the road,

and I never would have met Lavonne. It was a negative situation that caused it to happen.

What we wanted to happen was not happening, but because of that non-happening one of the

best things that ever happened to me happened. It was a non-event that prevented me from

missing a major event. Thank God for those things which never happened. Next we look at-

2 NEGATIVES THAT ARE PASSING.

David avoided many of the sorrows of life, and much evil was prevented in his life for

which he was deeply thankful. But the fact is, it is only in paradise that all evil is prevented,

and so David had his share of life's sorrows. He experienced sickness of body and sickness of

mind. He had fear and depression, and many tears over life's problems. He experienced

sickness of soul because of sin and separation from God. He acknowledges all of these in

Psa. 30. Yet none of these negatives stops this from being a Psalm of thanksgiving. It is

because all of these negatives are merely temporary, and they all pass away, and they leave

only the positives as permanent. In other words, what does not happen is the negatives of life

stay and hang on forever.

They come and they go. They are no nomads that pack up and move on. That they visit us

at all is a pain, but that they don't stay is our great pleasure. They happen, but they do not

happen permanently, and their non-endurance is ground for gratitude. They passed into the

realm of non-being. For the Christian all negatives will eventually pass into this realm.

I have a slight crack in one of my fillings, and every once in awhile I chew something hard

and I put pressure on that crack and end up with a toothache. It hurts bad enough so that I

feel like I'm in for some trouble, but then it ceases to hurt and I rejoice that it was only a

passing pain. It is easy to endure that which is only temporary. It is so wonderful when it

goes away that I am motivated to thank God for that which does not happen, which is the

continued and persistent pain.

I've read of an ocean steamer which decades ago was dashed against the rocks of

Newfoundland. Most all of the passengers lost their lives. A telegram came to a home in

Detroit announcing the drowning of a young man of that household. It was a sad day, and

loved ones entered the darkness of grief. A few hours later another telegram came

explaining that the young man had been found. He had survived after all, and that family

framed and hung that second telegram on their wall as a reminder of the glorious good news

of what had not happened. Their sorrow was quickly over, for the negative was merely

passing. In this case the bad news was not real, but even when it is real it can be a merely

passing negative.

Look at the cross. Jesus really did die, and the disciples were plunged to the depths of the

pit of sorrow. Nevertheless, in only a few days they were rejoicing in the risen Christ, for the

worst that Satan and all the powers of hell could do was only temporary. It was real, but evil

is only a passing reality. That which is forever is the good, the true, and the beautiful. That

is why David ends this Psalm on the high note of perpetual praise. "O Lord my God I will

give you thanks forever." Thank God that thanksgiving will never end. Here is something

that will never happen, and that is the cessation of thanksgiving, and for this eternal

non-event we will be eternally grateful.

Forever and forever he will thank God that none of his sorrows and sufferings follow him

into the presence of God. All evil will cease to happen, and that eternal non-happening of

evil will be added to the eternal happenings of God's love and grace so that David and all

God's children will have an infinite supply of reasons for eternal thankfulness. All the

former things will pass away says the New Testament, and for all eternity we will enjoy the

non-happening of sin and sorrow, and all the other consequences of man's fall. Thank God

that the worst that evil can throw at us is passing. Weeping may remain for a night, but joy

comes in the morning.

Abraham Lincoln had more than his fare share of life's trials. At age 7 he and his family

were evicted and suffered humiliation. At 9 his mother died. At age 26 his partner in

business died leaving him saddled with great debt. At 28 he was rejected by the girl he

proposed to. When he did marry he lost his 4 year old son in death. He lost numerous

elections and came near a mental breakdown in battles with depression. Yet he became the

16th president of the United States, and one of history's most thankful leaders, and one for

whom much thanks is given. Thank God for what didn't happen in this great man's life. He

didn't give up and stop the onward fight for what was just and right. That never happened,

and the result is we forget all of the passing problems he had to endure. We remember him

for the good that endures because of him.

David had to endure the judgment of God on his sin, but even this was passing, but God's

mercies on him were new every morning. Mercy is what God does not do to us that we

deserve. We deserve judgement, but God does not deal with us as we deserve, or reward us

according to our iniquities. In mercy He provides a way of escape that we might experience

His grace forever. Because of God's mercy there is no end to the things that never happen

that if they did it would be a curse. But the do not happen because of God's mercy. Count

your many blessings, but also count your many non-cursing that you deserve but never get

because of God's mercy.

"When all thy mercies, O my God,

My rising soul surveys,

Transported with the view,

I'm lost in wonder, love and praise."

This was David's song, and if we see life whole and see the infinite realm of the

non-existent and non-happenings of life, we to will have a song of praise and a heart of

gratitude regardless of life's troubles and trials. We will be getting a glimpse into that

infinite treasure of negative thanksgiving.