Today is Thanksgiving Day, so offer thanks to God with your whole heart! It will not only make God smile, it will do you some good, too. Bruce Chapman said it well: “Gratitude has been called the gateway to the virtues. As Cicero put it, ‘Gratitude is not only the greatest of the virtues, but the parent of all others,’ opening the heart to deeper appreciation, compassion, repentance, forgiveness, generosity, and wisdom. Giving thanks should be cultivated as a habit. It is a kind of “therapy for the spirit.” Try some “thanks therapy” today – you’ll be grateful you did.
Thanksgiving Therapy // Luke 17:15-17
One of the lepers, when he saw that he was healed, came back to Jesus, shouting, “Praise God!” He fell to the ground at Jesus’ feet, thanking him for what he had done. This man was a Samaritan. Jesus asked, “Didn’t I heal ten men? Where are the other nine?”
Every generation of parents ask a question of their children. It’s more of a prompting than a question. After receiving a gift or a favor, parents ask, “What do you say?” Of course, the expected response is, “thank you!”
That routine was repeated in my home when I was a child. My mother would ask me, “What do you say to Grammie for her brownies?” Now she didn’t really want my honest opinion—she would have gone postal if I had said, “Grammie, where in the name of heaven did you learn how to bake brownies? Every year they’re as hard as a rock! One of these times someone’s going to break a tooth.” My mom didn’t really care what I thought; she simply wanted a response of gratitude to show my acknowledgment for Grammie’s kindness and effort.
Parents still want their children to show gratitude even if their children don’t feel grateful. They want them to learn to offer thanks simply because it’s the right thing to do. Why? Simply because every human being lives with a debt of gratitude, owing thanks to someone for something. Of course, parents hope their kids won’t just parrot words of gratitude; they hope that the exercise of gratitude now will one day produce authentically grateful people.
And that is exactly what our Heavenly Father hopes for each of us! That is why you can’t go far into the Bible without a reference or an admonition to be thankful, as in this story of the ten lepers.
The ability to express gratitude is one of the fundamental signs of a redeemed life and a growing spirituality. To give thanks is one of the highest callings we have and one of the most self-benefiting things we can do. It keeps us from being self-absorbed. It produces an eternal perspective. It reminds us of how blessed we really are. It creates a perspective that sees that all of life is a gift.
At the end of each day G. K. Chesterton would say, “Here ends another day, during which I have had eyes, ears, hands [to experience this] great world around me. Tomorrow begins another day. Why am I allowed two?” That’s why Ambrose, Bishop of Milan said, “No duty is more urgent than that of returning thanks.” It keeps you focused on God’s goodness and not on yourself. And best of all, gratitude opens the door for more:
To be thankful for what we have received…is the surest way to receive more. (Andrew Murray)
So why not practice a little gratitude today! You’ll be grateful you did!
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