One of the challenges pastors and writers face is dealing with important topics like thankfulness every year. We must speak about being thankful each Thanksgiving. It’s not that we aren’t convinced being thankful is important, it’s that we’ve communicated our perspective many times before.
One of the passages I’ve often used to teach gratitude is Luke 17, where Jesus tells the story of 10 men who were healed of leprosy. Tragically, only one of the them returned to say thank you. Jesus asked the logical question, “Where are the other nine?” Then He told the grateful man, “…Your faith has healed you.” This year, I came across fresh insight from the story that I had never noticed.
Pastor Steve Malone wondered why Jesus said his faith had healed him when the other nine who weren’t appreciative were also healed. He suggested Jesus’ statement wasn’t merely about physical healing – but was spiritual perspective, too. The healed man was fi nally whole in a way he had never been. Being grateful made him a better, more balanced person.
Some psychologists believe sincere gratitude is one of the healthiest of all human emotions. Hans Selye, widely considered the father of stress studies, has observed that gratitude produces more positive emotional energy than any other attitude.
The truth is an attitude of gratitude that makes us more balanced and healthy than we are when we aren’t thankful. The challenge for each of us is how to develop that kind of attitude.
Several years ago, an experiment was conducted in New York’s Central Park during spring. An advertising agency dressed a person up as a blind man and gave him a cup to collect donations.