Where Thankfulness Begins

Todd Stiles   -  

In a few days, the vast majority of people in our nation will take intentional time to be thankful. Yes, Thanksgiving is the holiday we’ll celebrate, and gratefulness is the action we’ll take. But how does one go about being thankful?

In short, by being thinkful.

This is not only understood through the etymology of the word (the word “thank” stems from the Latin root “tong,” which means “think”), but Scripture shows us this very equation on display. It’s in Philippians 1:3, where Paul wrote that he “thanked God” for them upon “every remembrance” of them. See what he did there? He connected thankfulness with thinkfulness.

When our children were home, each year we would place blank pieces of paper around the house on Thanksgiving Day, each titled “I’m Thankful For…” and just waiting to be filled with responses. The blank paper made us think. And as we were prompted to think, it was a rightful nudge to thank.

I assume many of you do something similar, so you can relate to the joyful anticipation of knowing that by evening those once-blank sheets of paper will be filled with all kinds of items for which we are thankful. It all starts when we are thinkful.

Frankly, this is to be our mental (i.e., thinking) and verbal (i.e., thanking) posture year round. Scripture commands us to “give thanks in all circumstances” (1 Thessalonians 5:18), so thinking and thanking are best practices for God’s people. Why not get a head start on Thursday by doing both today!

Pastor Todd