By Karla Looking towards Heaven | Leave A Comment
One way to fortify our lives from sin is to live lives of active gratitude. Dissatisfaction is a stronghold waiting to happen. An unsatisfied soul should never be ignored. Ongoing or chronic feelings of dissatisfaction are waving red flags that need to be well inspected. Such feelings may mean something vital is missing, and we need to seek God without delay.
Other times, nagging feelings of dissatisfaction can be little more than the byproduct of living in such an overindulged society. Think about it. Countless millions of dollars are spent annually by advertisers whose only goal is to convince Americans that we are not yet satisfied. Since our hearts are deceptive in their natural form, sometimes our feelings are telling us we’re less satisfied than we really are.
How can we know the difference? Apply the phrase Paul supplied us: "Be thankful and give thanks." Active gratitude will cure self- or society-induced dissatisfaction. Often we know what our problem is . We even know what the remedy may be. If we’re going to continue on in our sincere and pure devotion to Christ, we’re going to have to start taking the medicine the Word prescribes when we’re spiritually feeling under the weather.
Many times we don’t have a knowledge problem; we have an obedience problem. Be thankful and give thanks . Do you hear what Paul is saying? Just trying to sit like a thankful-looking bump on a dead log won’t cut it. Actively give thanks.
When I’m feeling down or a little like a brat, I often sense God speaking to my heart, "Name ‘em, child." I don’t even have to ask what He means. He means start naming a mere twenty or thirty of the thousands of ways He’s shown His goodness to me. God has had such mercy on my life, I ought to be among the most grateful people on the earth, and that’s exactly what I want to be.
God has taught me another way to actively give thanks. He has shown His goodness
to me in innumerable ways through other people. I sense Him saying to me, "Give thanks to me first and foremost, but, Beth, I want you to be one of the most genuine and vocally grateful people others know. I have caused many people to show you kindness and help you accomplish your calling. Thank them continually." I am sure the same is true of your life. God is teaching me not just to be thankful for the love and support I receive from my family, my staff, my friends, and my church but to actively tell them.
If our selfish hearts are trying to trick us into feeling a false sense of dissatisfaction, a good strong dose of thanksgiving will cure what ails us! If it doesn’t, we’ve got a more serious issue, and we must diligently seek the wisdom and remedy of God.
Spend time giving thanks to God for the spiritual and physical blessings He has given you.
Adapted from When Godly People Do Ungodly Things , by Beth Moore, pages 110-111. Nashville: Broadman & Holman, 2002.
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Pretty good post. I’ve seen these red flags of ingratitude in the jobs I’ve had. I tell you what, I let those stay too long and it’s not long before I’m out of that job.
On a side note, you have some very distracting adds … a little disturbing …
But back on track now: thanks for the pretty good post.
I remember Christ saying, “The Kingdom of heaven is within you.” It’s one of the most wonderful passage I’ve heard.
Be thankful of each breath that we take. Be thankful of the beautiful morning sunlight. Appreciate the people around you. I always practice this mantra and it has wielded me great results.
Thanks for sharing this wonderful article.
Great post! I have been finding myself reminded more and more to give thanks “for all things”. Meaning, I have found myself being led to give God thanks for the “bad” stuff. I realize that I am shaped by the hard times as much as or more than the easy times. I believe God wants us to so completely rely on Him that often those bad times are a moment when we have no one to go to but Him…and that is right where He wants us. It is so easy to thank God for good stuff, but thanking Him for the bad stuff is important, too. One example for me would be on Friday. I was having a busy, busy, stupid busy day and the computer was so slow and then just went down. I was mad, the customers were mad, it was bad. I called another dealership to ask if they had any manual contracts. The lady I normally talk to there wasn’t available. Her son had been hit by a semi. It made my computer problems pale, obviously. I had to stop and thank God for the computer problems. It is my cup and I need to be thankful for it, good or bad.
I, too, am working day to day and moment to moment on being grateful in all things. Especially in being grateful for the things our culture tells us are bad. I’ve recently been diagnosised w/ fibromyalgia, chronic fatigue, and multiple chemical sensitivities. This is, I am told, a bad thing. But what I’ve found is that my heart is opening up and softening through this and my level of gratitude is raising and my family and I have grown so close these past few months – all huge blessings brought on by this ‘bad’ health. So I work on being grateful – even on the days filled with pain because even those days have their own special blessings, such as my 8yr old leaning over to give me a gentle little kiss on my cheek