GOD RESPONDS TO THE PRAYER OF A THANKFUL HEART

                                            

Praise the Lord! Oh, give thanks to the Lord, for He is good! For His mercy endures forever.
Psalm 106:1

 Recommended Reading: Psalm 106:1-5                         Praise the Lord! Oh, give thanks to the Lord, for He is good!For His mercy endures forever.Who can utter the mighty acts of the Lord?Who can declare all His praise?Blessed are those who keep justice,And he who does righteousness at all times!Remember me, O Lord, with the favor You have toward Your people.Oh, visit me with Your salvation,That I may see the benefit of Your chosen ones,That I may rejoice in the gladness of Your nation,That I may glory with Your inheritance.

COMMENTS:  Have you experienced the difference a grateful attitude makes in your day?  The energy such an attitude generates and how much brighter and well the day is and goes.  Is much like the difference between a sunny – warm day and a cold damp cloudy day.   Circumstances and labors and surroundings are identical but the difference made by adding sunlight and its warmth is dramatic.  Gratitude is much like that because it opens our soul and mind for God to enter and bring along His love and wisdom and influence.

Light enables us to see more clearly to work efficiently with needed energy and strength and mind.   God provides this and much more.   He also comes through His Holy Spirit providing His wisdom – insight – council – presence – strength – ….  The list of attributes and ways of help go on and on.

He also has a wonderful way of managing opportunities and attitudes so others are blessed by His presence as much as we are.

We think circumstances limit or enable our attitude of thankfulness and ability to work effectively, but the Holy Spirit’s influence and presence can and does enable what we do not have the strength or will to do on our own.

An example of that influence was experienced by Martin Rinkart, a Lutheran minister in Saxony, Germany in 1600 in the midst of the 30-year war and plague of that dark time.  Death and despair was all around him with little evidence or hope that circumstances would improve.

So, to improve everyone’s spirits, Rinkart was inspired to write a familiar hymn “Now thank we all our God”.  With this background, read the words of this hymn (below) and sing it if you are familiar with the music, letting its words sink deep into your soul.                                                                       Here is the first stanza:                                               Now thank we all our GodWith heart and hands and voices, who wondrous things has done, In whom his world rejoices; Who from our mother’s arms Has blessed us on our way With countless gifts of love, And still is ours today.     

If Martin Rinkart could write and sing this hymn of praise and worship – of thanksgiving to God in the midst of death rampant all around him both from war and from spreading disease, surely we can too.  Doing so was not denying what was going on around him, nor would immediately stop the war or disease, but did result in turning a corner to peace and healing.   More continued to die for a time, but souls were saved and hope was restored.  Singing songs of praise is not wasting time or energy any more than sharpening an axe before using or turning on a light switch in a room at night before working in that room or reading directions before assembling a new tool or piece of furniture.                                                                                           “Thankfulness is a soil in which pride does not easily grow.”  Michael Ramsey

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