The Altitude for Living


Oh, that men would give thanks to the Lord for His goodness, And for His wonderful works to the children of men (Psalm 107:8, nkjv)!


When God’s Word talks about giving “thanks to the Lord,” it isn’t saying just go through the motions. God is looking for our heart response, our genuine gratitude.

Gratitude means to express that a kindness received is truly valued. And as it relates to the Lord and to others, we’re to show them that their kindness means a great deal. So He instructs us to give thanks.

The Lord knows what He’s talking about; He made you. He knows how you operate, and His Manufacturer’s Specifications for the human race include gratitude. Ungratefulness is destructive—physically, emotionally, and spiritually (Romans 1:21). But thankfulness takes you to a better place with God and with the people in your life.

In fact, gratitude is the attitude that sets the altitude for living. There is a lifestyle that grovels, complains, and flies down low where it’s dirty and dark. This attitude is ungrateful, unthankful, and unhealthy. And there is another lifestyle that soars above it all, where the air is clean, the sun is shining, and the future is as bright as the promises of God. This mindset is grateful, thankful, and healthy.

And it’s in our power to choose it. “Oh, that [we] would give thanks to the Lord for His goodness.” Notice the verb would. If God had written could, we’d be able to blame Him as if He didn’t design us with the capacity to be thankful. But the text is clear that gratitude is a choice.

And it is a life-changing decision. If you’re an ungrateful person, if you don’t see the good that exists because you’re so consumed by what you’re unhappy about, that mindset is doing a lot of damage to you and those closest to you. It’s time for a change.

Let yourself be arrested by gratitude. As you calculate what you wish was different, know that, by God’s grace, some of these things will eventually change. Yet you are here, now, and you’re far better off than you would be apart from His grace. Can you make the decision to turn from the things that are not and focus instead on the abundant graces that are before you right now?


Journal

  • Are you a thankful person? If five people who know you best were interviewed, would they describe you as a glass-half-full or a glass-half-empty person?
  • What percentage of your thought life is good, positive, and thankful? How often do you express genuine gratitude, i.e., with a gift or note of appreciation?

Pray

Lord, echoing Psalm 107:8, I choose to give thanks to You for Your goodness and for Your wonderful works to Your children! God, thank You first for who You are—my good, faithful, gracious, loving God. Thank You second for Your gifts—food, shelter, clothes, people to love. Help me to always love You, the Giver, more than Your gifts. In the name of Jesus Christ I pray, amen.