Grateful People Are Always In The Minority Scott Pauley

pro-church-media-441073-unsplash

All month on Enjoying the Journey we have been studying the life of thankfulness. Around many tables today people will share a list of things for which they are grateful. On this Thanksgiving Day I am taking a few moments to reflect on one question: Am I truly a thankful person?

Are you?

You might be surprised to find that grateful people have always been in the minority. It is more natural to grumble and groan than to give thanks.

In the Old Testament the Lord sent twelve spies in to the land to spy out all that He had provided for them. He didn’t need their opinion or their idea. He just wanted them to see it and share with others the goodness of God. It was all His and He was about to give it to them!

When the twelve returned only two brought a good report (Numbers 13). The other ten spoke in unbelief and caused an entire generation to miss the blessings of the Lord. It dawned on me recently that their problem was that they weren’t thankful. If they had simply recognized how good God was being to them they would have returned praising God and encouraging the faith of others.

Sure, there were giants and obstacles. But God was greater than all that. Lester Roloff said, “Sometimes you can praise your way through things you can’t seem to pray your way through!”

Are you the two or the ten? Grateful people are always in the minority.

In the New Testament the Lord Jesus healed ten lepers. Completely whole! Perfectly restored! And only one man returned to say thank you. In the words of Christ, “Were there not ten cleansed? but where are the nine? There are not found that returned to give glory to God, save this stranger” (Luke 17:17-18).

We have all been blessed – materially, physically, spiritually, eternally. Where are the nine?

Are you the one or the nine? Grateful people are always in the minority.

Be the two, not the twelve. Be the one, not the nine. Be willing to live in the minority and give God thanks. Anyone can complain and most will. God’s people should live a life of gratitude today and every day.

 


Discover more from Enjoying the Journey

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

Post Author

More from similar topics

Subscribe to Blog via Email

Recent Posts

A journey through 1 John reveals our place in the family of God, how we can have assurance, and that our joy is rooted in Christ.

Journey through 1 John

“Jesus saw Nathanael coming to him, and saith of him, Behold an Israelite indeed, in whom is no guile! Nathanael saith unto him, Whence knowest thou me? Jesus answered and said unto him, Before that Philip called thee, when thou wast under the fig tree, I saw thee.” (John 1:47-48)

Why the Story of Nathanael Sitting Under the Fig Tree Matters

It also discusses the Four Sermons in Haggai It is in that context that God raises up the prophet Haggai with four sermons in four months. The Word of the Lord comes to Haggai, and he preaches four sermons. Each one of them is dated for us. Each sermon targets a different problem. You can read them in Haggai chapters one and two. In his first sermon (Haggai 1:1-15), Haggai preached on the danger of waiting when we should be working. They were waiting for a sign to build. He said, You don't need a sign, you need to obey God. Haggai's second sermon (Haggai 2:1-9) explained the danger of lamenting the past and missing the present. They were sorrowing over the destruction of the past temple. God said, Build a new one. It was G. Campbell Morgan who said, “It is impossible to unlock the present with the rusty key of the past." Many people are bogged down in their past and miss the present. Keep in mind what is at hand and what is ahead. The third sermon he preached (Haggai 2:10-19) described the danger of seeing only the material and neglecting the supernatural. They could see the work that needed to be done, but they missed the fact that God had resources that would help them get it done. The Lord was behind all of this. The fourth sermon (Haggai 2:20-23) warned against the danger of recognizing who is against us and forgetting who is for us. They were concentrating on the opposition and forgetting that “greater is he that is in you, than he that is in the world” (1 John 4:4). A journey through Haggai shows us the importance of performing the work that God has told us to do, and His glory in our obedience. Image leads to an overview of Haggai

Journey through Haggai

How Social Media Shapes Our Heart

How Social Media Shapes Our Hearts

6 Comments

  1. wlgraham on November 24, 2018 at 10:03 AM

    Love the post! Thankfulness is sooooo vitally important to the Christian walk! Repeatedly Peter brings up the topic of remembering (I Peter 1:12, 13, 15), which is sooooo important to being thankful and having gratitude! That is, IF one remembers…then one should have no trouble being thankful!

    Interestingly, Paul writes in Romans 2:4, “…the goodness of God leadeth thee to repentance.” If a Christian will constantly be aware of God’s (undeserved) goodness in his life…then that Christian should have no trouble continuing in his faithful walk of love and service to his God and Savior! That is: Remembering should result in thankfulness, which will result in a humble walk with his God!

    • Scott Pauley on November 26, 2018 at 9:04 AM

      Thanks for keeping up with our posts!

  2. wlgraham on November 24, 2018 at 10:21 AM

    Might I add the following two comments?

    Regarding the ten lepers, I am always amazed with the truth that EVEN GOD LIKES A THANK YOU!

    Regarding the receiving of gifts from others and the giving of gifts to others, I recall words like: “Record the gifts and kindnesses of others toward you in stone; record the gifts and kindnesses of you toward others in sand.”

    Somehow those two comments are interwoven. That is, although written in sand…like God, even we like a thank you!

  3. Jess Enochs on November 18, 2021 at 5:22 PM

    IF WE PAUSE TO THINK, WE HAVE CAUSE TO THANK

    • scottpauley on November 26, 2021 at 5:14 PM

      Great statement.

Leave a Reply