A good time for gratitude
When we suffer tragic circumstances or when we are sad over a
misfortune, we give vent to our grief. We are all aware of what we
lack or what we have lost. Are we grateful, appreciative and
thankful, though, in times of joy and blessing, prosperity and
well-being? A survivor of a flood was asked if he prayed during the
crisis. He replied, “For that kind of thing, you should be prayed-up
in advance.” It is one thing to pray during times of crisis, but a
greater thing is to cultivate a lifelong daily relationship with God
through an outpouring of thanksgiving.
We are blessed with the ability to love, work, think, create, hope
and to be alive each day. I am grateful to live in a land of freedom,
to enjoy a faith that inspires me, for all who bequeathed a legacy of
meaning and purpose to me, for the promise of the future. I believe
that man will not perish for a want of information but for lack of
appreciation. So, I am thankful for what I have received and for what
I have escaped. A man said to journalist Horace Greely, “I am a
self-made man!” Greely responded, “I am glad you have absolved God of
any responsibility for you!” No one is “self-made.” We are all
indebted to God for making us who we are and for placing within us,
around us and above us gifts that are at all times and in all ways
claims on our appreciation.
It was reported that Rudyard Kipling received 10 shillings for every word he wrote. Students at Oxford University sent Kipling 10
shillings with the request that he send them “one of your very best
words.” He called back, “Thanks.”
RABBI MARK MILLER
Temple Bat Yahm
Newport Beach
I am thankful for an opportunity to count our blessings: the glory
of a sunset over the Pacific and a sunrise over the Atlantic; the
majesty of a mountain or the ribboned beauty of a Grand Canyon carved
by the millennial slice of the winding river; the tart taste of a
crisp, fall apple; the delicate beauty of a red, red rose; the cool
texture of a smooth, round stone; the smell of fresh-baked bread or
fresh-mown grass or fresh-turned soil; the surprise of a gift.
Nothing on earth can be bought that is better than the touch of a
friend or father or mother or husband or wife; the giggle of a child;
“I love you.” The unutterable joy of a relationship reconciled after
much hurt. The goodness of a community become a family who will not
give up on you.
May I hold up a face that becomes radiant within your sight; a
mathematical equation beautiful in its perfection; the feel of a
cross-court, two-handed backhand that leaves your racket certain to
caress both sideline and baseline; a perfectly hit drive splitting
the fairway long and high; a swished jump-shot or line-drive home
run. Personally, I am still celebrating the Angels’ 2002 World
Series! As a Golden Bear, I rejoice that Cal footballers will go to a
bowl game as I wish a national championship for that team the Bears
beat 34-31 this fall.
As a Christian, I am moved to gratitude by rock ‘n’ roll rhythms
like the Birds’ “Jesus is just all right with me ,” and/or an anthem
sung by willing voices, lovingly led, in joyous praise of God: a Bach
fugue on the St. Anne theme, “O God, our help in ages past, our hope
for years to come,” in which notes run on and on in intricate harmony
and in the same Godlike excess to be found in nature. Above all, I am
thankful for the grace of God.
THE VERY REV. CANON
PETER D. HAYNES
St. Michael & All Angels
Episcopal Church
Corona del Mar
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