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At one time there
was a radio program called ”Job Center of the Air.” The host
said that of the 2,500 people he helped find employment, only
10 sent thank-you notes. He was surprised and somewhat hurt.
Jesus healed 10
lepers and only one of those turned back to him to thank him.
Jesus asked a searching question. ”Were there not ten cleansed?
but where are the nine? There are not found that returned
to give glory to God, save this stranger.”
Do we have the
attitude of gratitude? Do we thank God every day for all the
blessings that He has bestowed upon us?
Some of us seem
to take for granted the goodness of our Heavenly Father. We
don’t think much about our eyes until we face blindness. Our
hearing is an accepted fact until we begin to lose it. Those
who can run and jump do not realize what it is like not to
walk.
No doubt Zacharias
had taken his ability to hear and speak for granted until
the angel struck him deaf and dumb for nine months.
The spiritual gifts
we receive from God are even more important than our physical
ones. To think that the Lord has called us out of all the
teeming billions of people living on this planet should fill
us with overwhelming gratitude. Jesus has told us that none
can come to him except the Father which had sent him draw
him.
Since we have been
drawn, called and invited to live and reign forever with His
son on this earth, we ought never to take this for granted,
Do we act like
we are thankful? Paul writes to the Romans about some who,
”When they knew God, they glorified him not as God neither
were thankful.” On the other hand, Paul exhorts us to ”let
the peace of God rule in your hearts, to the which also ye
are called in one body and be ye thankful.”
One of the ways
we can show thankfulness to God is by the way we show thankfulness
to one another. By the way we treat each other we are showing
Him that we love Him because we love His other children.
A retired school
teacher in her eighties was overjoyed to get a letter from
a former student thanking her for her role in his life. She
responded immediately: ”I can’t tell you how much your letter
meant to me. You will be interested to know that I taught
school for 50 years and yours is the first note of appreciation
I have ever received. It filled me with cheer.”
How sad that out
of the hundreds or thousands of students this lady taught
only one said, ”thank you.” And that one waited until she
was in her eighties. What if she had died the year before?
Are there kind
thoughts we have meant to express but haven’t? Are there kind
deeds we have meant to do but haven’t? Do it now. ”Whosoever
shall give to drink unto one of these little ones a cup of
cold water only in the name of a disciple, verily I say unto
you, he shall in no wise lose his reward.” Do it now.
If we are the recipient
of a kind word or deed, please remember to say ”thank you.”
But if we are the doer of the kind word or deed, do it whether
they say thank you or not, for Jesus tells us that our Heavenly
Father ”is kind unto the unthankful and to the evil. Be ye
therefore merciful as your Father also is merciful.”
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