I was talking with a friend recently about how, with all God's blessings and all we have to be thankful for, we should be overflowing with gratitude.
Instead, we often have to "make" ourselves stop and think about thankfulness.
Oh, sometimes we're spontaneously inspired to praise God when we see a beautiful sunset, or when someone does something unexpected for us. We love that Thanksgiving gives us an opportunity to focus on our blessings. Some even post on blogs or social media something they are grateful for every day in November.
Those are all good practices.
But what about the rest of the year? How can we overcome the distraction of everyday cares and duties to be intentionally thankful?
Here are a few ideas:
Read the Bible regularly. Not only will we see multitudes of things to be thankful for, but we'll see examples of how people thanked God. The admonition to "let the word of Christ dwell in you richly" in Colossians 3:16-17 is sandwiched between verses telling us to be thankful, suggesting a connection.
Some years ago I did a Thanksgiving Bible Study that turned out to be a big blessing. Just looking up a few verses with "thanks" or "thanksgiving" in a concordance will inspire us.
The psalmists talk about their problems, confusion, and pain, but the psalms are threaded through with hope and praise. The last several psalms especially focus on praising the Lord in just about every manner possible.
Psalm 145 is one of many that shares the two main categories of things we praise God for: who He is, and what He has done. The first seven verses say:
I will extol you, my God and King,
and bless your name forever and ever.
2 Every day I will bless you
and praise your name forever and ever.
3 Great is the Lord, and greatly to be praised,
and his greatness is unsearchable.
4 One generation shall commend your works to another,
and shall declare your mighty acts.
5 On the glorious splendor of your majesty,
and on your wondrous works, I will meditate.
6 They shall speak of the might of your awesome deeds,
and I will declare your greatness.
7 They shall pour forth the fame of your abundant goodness
and shall sing aloud of your righteousness.
Pray. We can ask God to open our hearts to see the ways He has blessed us and help us not to just mention them rotely, but to be truly thankful. It helps, also, to turn psalms or thanksgiving passages into prayer.
Some incorporate a regular time for giving thanks in their prayer time. Some use the acronym A.C.T.S.:
A: Adoration, praise
C: Confession of sin
T: Thanksgiving
S: Supplication, or requests
Say thank you to God immediately.We're taught from an early age to say thank you when someone gives to us or does for us. Why not do that with God in real time all through the day?
Thank you for this good parking space!
Thank you for helping me see that unadvertised markdown on pork chops at the store.
Thank you for helping that difficult conversation go well.
What beautiful tiny flowers by the sidewalk. Thank you for creating them and putting them here for me to see. What artistry You put even in a small gathering of blooms.
We don't have to wait untll our official prayer time to mention these things. We'd likely forget most of them then. But we can keep up a running conversation with God all through the day.
Recall blessings as you fall asleep. I used to listen to music as I fell asleep. More recently, I set my audiobook timer. But as Bing Crosby crooned in the movie White Christmas, we can "Count your blessings instead of sheep." I don't know if the songwriter had the psalms in mind, but David wrote, "My soul will be satisfied as with fat and rich food, and my mouth will praise you with joyful lips, when I remember you upon my bed, and meditate on you in the watches of the night; for you have been my help, and in the shadow of your wings I will sing for joy" (Psalm 63:5-7).
Start a gratitude journal. Some like to keep a running record of what they are thankful for. This has two advantages. Writing them down helps reinforce them in our minds, and we're blessed again when we later peruse our written records.
Recount your Ebenezers, In 1 Samuel 7, Samuel set up a stone to commemorate the Lord's help, calling it an "Ebenezer," which means "stone of help." Some years ago I was encouraged to make a list of those special times in life when I especially saw God's hand at work. As we tell stories of God's faithfulness and blessings, we encourage ourselves and others.
Set times for thanksgiving. Some families make time on Thanksgiving Day for everyone to share something they are thankful about. Why not do this at intervals through the year?
Use music. Elisabeth Elliot wrote in On Asking God Why: "When I stumble out of bed in the morning, put on a robe, and go into my study, words do not spring spontaneously to my lips--other than words like, 'Lord, here I am again to talk to you. It's cold. I'm not feeling terribly spiritual....' Who can go on and on like that morning after morning, and who can bear to listen to it day after day?"
She goes on to say that two things helped her. One was the book of psalms. She writes of David: "He found expression for praise far beyond my poor powers, so I use his and am lifted out of myself, up into heights of adoration, even though I'm still the same ordinary woman alone in the same little room." The other help was hymns. She cites a few and writes, "By putting into words things on earth for which we thank him, we are training ourselves to be ever more aware of such things as we live our lives. It is easy otherwise to be oblivious of the thousand evidences of his care."
Many hymns contain thanksgiving, but they also have phrases that could be turned into prayers of thanks.
Here are a couple of my favorites:
"Thanks to God for My Redeemer" sung by the Sacred Music Services' men's chorus.
"My Heart is Filled with Thankfulness" (written by Keith Getty and Stuart Townend. I don't know the folks in the video, but I like this version).
What about when we don't really feel thankful?
Thanksgiving isn't a feeling; it's an action. We can give God thanks whether we feel thankful or not. Usually, once we do, the feelings come.
And usually, once we start looking for things to thank God for, it's hard to stop.
How about you? Do any of these practices resonate with you? Do you have other ways to be intentionally thankful through the year?
(I often link up with some of these bloggers.)
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