And he fell on his face at Jesus' feet, giving him thanks. Now he was a Samaritan. Luke 17:16 ESV
On our recent trip, one morning, I noticed that, instead of being thankful, I was doing a lot of complaining. My bed was too hard, (but it was clean): the air conditioner was too loud (But it worked well), the breakfast served at the hotel was skimpy, (But someone had come in at 5 AM to prepare it for me). I asked God to forgive my ungrateful attitude and began recalling the many times when Jesus gave thanks. He thanked God, for the five loaves and two fish, before they were multiplied. He thanked God for always hearing His prayers before Lazarus was raised from the dead. Even on, “The night when He was betrayed,” Jesus took bread and gave thanks. So ashamed of my own petty griping, I wondered how I could become grateful like Him. But as asked for forgiveness, God began to show me that “Giving thanks” was not something He was asking me to feel, rather it was an action that He expected me to do.
God wants us to have the thankfulness of the man in today’s verse. This guy was nobody special. He was simply just one of ten lepers, who came to Jesus for healing. All ten of them looked to God for help. All of them, prayed, asking for mercy, all of them obeyed what Jesus told them to do, and all of them were joyful when they saw that they had been healed. But the Samaritan was unique because he stopped in his tracks and returned to give thanks. If we are to learn gratitude, we need to do the same. Instead of trying hard to work up a grateful feeling, we need to just stop in the tracks of our fussing and moaning, come back to Jesus, and simply give Him thanks!
Beautiful, Pete. Thank you! Blessings!
Thanks Bruce. Have a blessed day!
I thank the Lord for you, Pastor Pete! 🙏
Thank you Cindy. I love that older song by The Katinas. It makes me stop and really think. Have a wonderful day!
Amen…thanks!
Oh, I love this so much! What you said about not needing to work up a feeling of thankfulness but to just turn around, come back to Jesus, and thank Him is so powerful! Thank YOU, Pete, for this very important truth brought home in a way that I will remember.
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Thank you, Pastor Pete! Thankfulness really does make a difference!
Yes it glorifies God and is a wonderful corrective to complaining.