“O Come, let us sing for joy to the Lord;
Let
us shout joyfully to the rock of
our salvation.
Let
us come into his presence with
thanksgiving;
let
us make a joyful noise to him
with songs of praise!
For the Lord is a great God, and a great King above
all gods.” Ps. 95:1-3
A grateful heart is contagious.
There is so much talk in recent days about super spreaders.
Let me ask you:
are you contagious?
If so, what is the contagion you carry?
Is it gratitude?
Allow me to read something to you posted by Chris
Vallotton recently on his FB feed. (If you don’t know who Chris Vallotton is,
he is a Pastor and prophetic voice from Bethel Church in Redding California).
He posted this:
“I met a man in his 50s confined to a wheel chair a
while back.
I heard that many years earlier he was in a car
accident that crippled him.
He was left to provide for his wife and kids from that
chair for the rest of his life!
I asked him how he was doing?
He smiled and said, “I am doing so good!”
“You are,” I questioned, wondering if he was being
real?
“Yes, I feel great! He responded, smiling from ear to
ear- his face glowing.
I stared at him awkwardly for a moment, sort of lost
in his response.
“He’s doing so good yet he is handicapped, confined to
that chair forever...how could he being doing good,” I pondered?
“And if he is doing “”so good,”” how come I am not
soaring in my condition,”
I asked myself?
I walked away that day realizing that so much of life
is determined by the way you think about it.
You can’t always help what happens to you but you can
always help what happens in you.
I know others who have had everything handed to them
their entire lives, yet they describe themselves as victims...life isn’t
working out perfect for them and it’s someone’s else’s fault.
No matter how much you have been given, or how little
you started with, life can be tough. And just about the time you start feeling
sorry for yourself, some dude rolls up in his wheelchair smiling from ear to
ear, and takes away all your excuses for not being thankful for God’s grace in
your life.”
Let me read again one line from his post – Chris said:
You can’t always help what happens to you
but you can always help what happens in you.
So regardless of all the external circumstances,
pressures and issues of life,
let me ask you: What is happening in you?
Are you thankful, content and filled with gratitude
for what God has given you?
Sometimes it can be difficult to rise above our
circumstances.
Chris observed someone who was grateful in spite of
his circumstances.
Not only did he observe him, it caused Chris to
evaluate his own attitude as well as the attitude he often saw in others.
We don’t have to be a victim.
Maybe we have had a hard season in life but as Chris
pointed out –
You can’t always help what happens to you but you can
always help what happens in you.
Allow the gratitude of others to rub off on you.
Greet the day, not with a grumble, but with praise to
God for His goodness and mercy toward you.
If grumpiness is contagious how much more so should
gratitude be to those of us who call ourselves believers!