A friend and mentor reminded me yesterday that it's in these times that we have the choice between resentment and gratitude. For most of my years I've thought this type of talk to be empty and callous at best, but I trust this friend. Another friend and mentor sat with me not too long ago and echoed my prayers of anger and frustration with God. His response to my cries shocked me at first, but led me to a freedom of dialogue with Abba. Later I heard more of his story, the pains of long addiction and ruined relationships. His response to his troubles knocked my legs out from under me. He was grateful, really and deeply thankful for his pains because they drew him into an abiding place with God that once seemed impossible and too far removed.
I'm learning, slow and steady, that in the times that I hit a wall of pain, frustration or insanity I can be grateful, and not just with empty verbal platitudes.
-I can be glad for my addiction because it forces me to reckon with my inability to control life and turn towards the guiding care I can receive from Abba.
-I can be grateful for my unstable finances as they teach me to receive what I am given as all coming from a watchful and gracious God.
-I can be thankful for my rocky, ruined and disintegrating relationships as they draw me, through my loneliness, into a deeper abiding with a God who calls me His beloved.
I'm not saying this is easy. In fact, I'm saying that just a few minutes before I started typing I was overcome with resentment, anger and distrust. My mind constantly pulls me in this direction; but today I choose to be grateful. In the midst of my ship seeming to be capsized and flooded, I'm glad for my Captain and my crew-mates.
When this seems impossible, that the odds are stacked too highly against you, you're not alone. The Serenity Prayer has long been used to help re-calibrate our souls towards abiding gratitude.
"God, grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change, courage to change the things I can & wisdom to know the difference: living one day at a time, enjoying one moment at a time: accepting hardship as a pathway to peace: taking, as Jesus did, this sinful world as it is, not as I would have it: trusting that You will make all things right if I surrender to Your will: so that I may be reasonably happy in this life and supremely happy with You forever in the next. Amen." Reinhold NiebuhrThis intentional abiding in God, despite external circumstances, is what allowed Paul to speak so boldly about gratitude in the face of suffering.
"Summing it all up, friends, I’d say you’ll do best by filling your minds and meditating on things true, noble, reputable, authentic, compelling, gracious—the best, not the worst; the beautiful, not the ugly; things to praise, not things to curse...Do that, and God, who makes everything work together, will work you into his most excellent harmonies. I’m glad in God, far happier than you would ever guess...Actually, I don’t have a sense of needing anything personally. I've learned by now to be quite content whatever my circumstances. I’m just as happy with little as with much, with much as with little. I've found the recipe for being happy whether full or hungry, hands full or hands empty. Whatever I have, wherever I am, I can make it through anything in the One who makes me who I am." Philippians 4:8-14 (The Message)Ask yourself, am I choosing gratitude or resentment, peace or despair, rest or anxiety, a glad heart or a downcast spirit? Abide in the One who calls you His beloved.
Good stuff Branden! Really good stuff. I've learned in the last 12 months or so that resentment is definitely a choice. It usually hurts me more than it hurts the ones we're aiming to hurt with it so we can attempt to control their behavior to my liking. Choosing resentment always robs me of peace and mental sobriety. Thanks for this positive trigger! Nice work brother. Grateful for Branden Henry in my life. See you in the trenches.
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