Imagine you fall off the side of an ocean liner and, not
knowing how to swim, begin to drown. Someone on the deck spots you, flailing in
the water and throws you a life preserver. It lands directly in front of you
and, just before losing consciousness, you grab hold for dear life. They pull
you up onto the deck, and you cough the water out of your lungs.
People gather
around, rejoicing that you are safe and waiting expectantly while you regain
your senses. After you finally catch your breath, you open your mouth and say:
"Did you see the way I grabbed onto that life preserver? How tightly I
held on to it? I was all over that thing!"
Needless to say, it would be a bewildering and borderline
insane response. To draw attention to the way you cooperated with the rescue
effort denigrates the whole point of what happened, which is that you were
saved. A much more likely chain of events is that you would immediately seek
out the person who threw the life preserver, and you would thank them. Not just
superficially, either. You would embrace them, ask them their name, invite them
to dinner and maybe give them your cabin!
‘Law & Gospel’ (Mockingbird Ministries, 2015), page 73
‘Law & Gospel’ (Mockingbird Ministries, 2015), page 73
But when the kindness and love of God our Savior appeared, he saved us,
not because of
righteous things we had done, but because of his mercy. Titus
3:4-5.
Kelsy Richardson, who is currently conducting graduate
research on ‘gratitude’ at Fuller Seminary, named pride as a major deterrent to
gratitude said, “When you believe you deserve the good things you receive, you don’t
feel the need to be grateful to others.”
“Without effort,
feelings of gratitude are often fleeting, passing as quickly as they come. For
example, I’m grateful to have a clean bill of health but gripe as soon as a
cold interferes with my busy life. I have a kitchen filled with food but
complain about cooking and closet filled with clothes but, “nothing to wear.”
Tiffany Musik Matthews
Research suggests that gratitude can’t simply be grouped
with other emotions, like happiness or anger, because unlike other emotions,
gratitude takes a conscious effort. In
order to be grateful, we must first take the time to recognize that something
has been done for our benefit. The culture’s prevalent attitude, ‘of what
have you done for me lately,’ reflects expectation not gratitude.
Dr. Robert Emmons, professor of psychology at UC Davis says,
“Feeling grateful is not the same as
being a grateful person, a grateful person is one who regularly affirms the
goodness in his or her life and recognizes that the sources of this goodness lie
at least partially outside of themselves.” Notice Emmons says that
gratefulness does not come from us or because of us.
In today’s age of entitlement many have come to expect that
their lives should have less discomfort, but we are not God and cannot
guarantee what we desire. Being truly grateful extends beyond our own convenience.
Gratitude also goes against our need to feel in control of our environment. With
gratitude you accept life as it is and are grateful for what you have.
The evidence is clear that cultivating gratitude in our
lives makes us happier and healthier people. As receivers of salvation and
divine grace, we should strive to be grateful in all seasons of our lives.
In daily life we must
see that it is not happiness that makes us grateful, but gratefulness that
makes us happy. Brother David
Steindl-Rast