SAYING THANK YOU
First of all, I want to
say thank you to each of you who take the time to read my articles each week. I
believe that our God is inspiring me to write them and put them out on the
dates I do because someone needs to hear that particular message at that
particular time. So thank you so much for opening them and reading them. I love
you, the body of Christ, and those who join us in that body each and every day.
And I pray that my messages are a help to you.
It came to mind the other
day that many people have never really been taught to say thank you for items
or services rendered. People seem to believe that others do things because they
WANT to do them. But Godly actions have a different motivation. They are things
we do because they are right and honorable, and we do them for those reasons, whether
or not we WANT to do them.
People have to be taught
to WANT to do good things. If we aren’t taught to make a habit of doing
honorable things, then by nature, we will serve our own desires first, above
those desires of our Creator. Very few
people will put another person’s feelings or needs above their own, but God
taught His people to do that very thing, and Jesus emphasized it to us in his
actions. In Sunday school, we were taught what was called “The Golden Rule:” “Do
unto others what you would want to be done unto you,” and the other old adage, “Put
yourself in their shoes.” These concepts were not only taught in Christian
churches but in other philosophies and religions as well.
Ethical and altruistic
motivation and actions don’t seem to come automatically, and if they do, they
are quickly overridden by selfishness as children grow and encounter opposition
and look for ways to avoid or counter the perceived enemies. It is at this
point that wisdom needs to be taught as a necessary component of love and giving.
If we let the ideology of “doing what we want” take over, then we risk letting
arbitrary ethics rule rather than the wisdom which is spoken and written by
God.
Since our society has
strayed from Biblical morality and abandoned many ethical and honorable ways of
conducting our lives, many kindnesses and courtesies have been thrown to the
realm of arbitrary, subjective, and random, rather than the normal way to
interact as a Bible-believing human being.
This change in behavior
has been a long and insidious process, and even those of us who were taught
right have slipped into ways that are not Biblically correct. This new behavior
is all to the detriment and deterioration of our cultures and society at large.
Simply put, we need to bring back the Biblical kindnesses, ethics, and ways of Jesus
in our own lives and the lives of our children. Saying “thank you” is only a
miniscule start to taking back our lives with Biblical principles on purpose.
Being thankful shows APPRECIATION. If we aren’t
thankful, DEPRECIATION sets in. Francine can show appreciation
for her husband, but if she doesn’t, his value starts to depreciate in
her eyes, and if it goes far enough, pretty soon, she’s asking for a divorce.
At this point, Gerard, her husband, has little to no, hope for recovery.
Fortunately, situations like this can often be prevented by the consistent
application of two simple words in the relationship, “Thank you.”
Relationships appreciate or depreciate in proportion to
thanksgiving.
When someone shows us how much they appreciate us, we’re willing
to do more. God’s relationship with us is also better when we tell Him thank
you. Awesome benefits come with expressing appreciation and thanksgiving.
By truly thanking the Lord from our hearts, He becomes bigger in
our minds. We become more aware of the miracles, the mercy, the healing, and
the deliverance He brings into our everyday lives. David says: “I will magnify
him with thanksgiving” (Ps. 69:30). We know we can’t really make God any
bigger than He already is, but we certainly can make Him bigger in our own
thinking and believing. We make the Lord’s presence larger in our lives by
saying thank you and showing appreciation.
How much better would we feel if people thanked us more often?
Think about it. It means they, first of all, had to take notice of you. Saying
“thank you” means a decision, effort, and positive action is made in your
direction. Showing a little appreciation seems like a very small thing, but
actually, it’s pretty great. It’s like a baby compliment for something you said
or did, or are. And who doesn’t need a few more kudos and compliments now and
then?
Ephesians 5 tells us how to be followers of God: “Be ye therefore
followers of God, as dear children; and walk in love, as Christ also hath loved
us, and hath given himself for us an offering and a sacrifice to God for a
sweetsmelling savour (vv. 1-2).
“For ye were sometimes darkness, but now are
ye light in the Lord: walk as children of light: (for the fruit of the
Spirit is in all goodness and righteousness and truth;) proving what
is acceptable unto the Lord. And have no fellowship with the unfruitful works
of darkness, but rather reprove them” (vv. 8-11).
“Wherefore he saith, Awake thou that sleepest,
and arise from the dead, and Christ shall give thee light. See then that ye
walk circumspectly, not as fools, but as wise, redeeming the time, because the
days are evil. Wherefore be ye not unwise, but understanding what the will of
the Lord is” (vv. 14-17).
“Giving thanks always for all things unto God and
the Father in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ; submitting yourselves one to
another in the fear [respect] of God” (vv. 20-21).
If you’re already keeping the “Golden Rule” toward others,
and putting yourselves in others shoes in your mind, and always remembering to
say thank you, then this message is not for you. But if you needed a little
reminder, like most of us do at times, then I expect this will be a much better
week than the last one, just because of you and God, and letting the Lord “work
in us to will and to do of His good pleasure” (Phil. 2:13-14).
I pray that we will see God bigger, our
relationships with people will be richer, and our personal lives will be more
blessed because of what we do with this message this week.
Love, Carolyn
Check out some of my other writings: https://www.amazon.com/s?k=wings+carolyn+molica&crid=EZNJZZUP3KHG&linkCode=ll2&linkId=db88efb13727dcb484eb29f5b1683284&sprefix=wings+carolyn+molica%2Caps%2C353&tag=jmbcsds-20&ref=as_li_ss_tl
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