Today is Thanksgiving Day in America. We have so much to be thankful for. I just wish more of us were fixated on the providence of the Lord and less on schemes for hitting the right stores in the proper order to maximize our savings potential on Black Friday.
I know: “Dan, don’t be a curmudgeon on Thanksgiving Day.” Received. Noted.
I wrote a couple weeks ago about humility in the wake of the 2012 election results. The more I think about humility and reflect on Thanksgiving Day, the more I understand this:
Truly humble people are always thankful. Truly thankful people are always humble.
It’s funny how those two go hand in hand.
Maybe the reason for so little humility in America is that we have forgotten how to be thankful. Maybe the largesse we have experienced for so long has short-circuited our ability to step back and see that God’s providence trumps our own efforts, with all our gains less under our control than the Lord’s. Because we make too much of our own work, we forget what it means to be humble.
And so the loop goes on and on.
More than anything, I want to be a thankful person. I don’t want to look on anything good I receive in life and say, “I deserve that!” Because I don’t. And neither do you.
If that doesn’t humble us, I don’t know what can.
Truly humble people are always thankful. Truly thankful people are always humble.
Be both thankful and humble this Thanksgiving Day.
Blessings.