Count Your Blessings
It took a week for my Grandfather Richard to die from
Meningitis. The country doctor rode by
on his horse every day to check on Richard but there was nothing much that he
could do to stop the raging infection.
The year was 1911 and antibiotics had not been discovered then. Six other people on nearby farms had died
from Meningitis that winter and fear was spreading throughout the community that
more would catch this contagious disease..
My Grandmother Eva was thirty years old with two little
children when her beloved husband died and she became a widow. She wore black dresses and cried a lot those
first few months. Her grief and fear
were more than she thought she could bear.
She was fearful for herself and her children. How could she run the farm all by herself? How could she feed her children? There was no welfare system in place at that
time and few jobs outside the home for women. Fear and depression settled in over her like a
dark cloud.
But shortly after my grandfather’s death my grandmother was
in church one Sunday when the congregation sang a favorite hymn, “Count Your
Blessings” (published in 1897). As they
were all singing this hymn my grandmother thought to herself that perhaps she
should do what the words of the hymn were encouraging folks to do – to count
their blessings. So she promised herself
right then and there that she would do that. That she would thank God for all of her
blessings. Even though she had lost her beloved husband and had no money to
raise her children, she would trust God and develop the habit of thanking Him
for any blessing she might have.
Gratitude is a discipline.
It involves a conscious choice. The prophet Habakkuk chose to praise God
in the midst of terrible times. Let’s
listen to what he had to say: “Though
the fig tree may not blossom, nor fruit be on the vines: Though the labor of the olive may fall, And
the fields yield no food: Though the
flock may be cut off from the fold. And
there be no herd in the stalls. Yet I
will rejoice in the Lord. I will joy in
the God of my salvation.” (Habakkuk 3:
17-18) My grandmother told me that if
Habakkuk could praise God during his dark night of the soul that she could do
it too.
So after that, every day my grandmother counted her
blessings. And every day she thanked God
for each one that she counted. She told
me that she found more and more blessings every day to thank God for. And the more she was thankful the more
blessings seemed to pop up. New ones every day!
Her father promised
to come over to her farm and help her one day a week with the farm work. And she rented out part of her house to a
single woman and used the rent money to hire another farm worker to do more of
the work that her husband had done. My
grandmother told me that her decision to remember her blessings and to thank
God for each one turned her life around and gave her the strength to keep on going
during a difficult time.
The concept of remembering what God has done for us (and is
doing) is an important biblical theme.
The command not to forget is given more than four hundred times in the
Bible. We are to remember the wonders of
God’s creation. (Deuteronomy 4:32) And
we are to remember that the world belongs to God. (Psalm 50:10) The Israelites were to remember that God
delivered them from captivity in Egypt . (Deuteronomy 5:15) And we are to remember the sacrificial gift
of Jesus Christ on the cross for us. (1
Corinthians 11:25)
Remembering keeps us from the sin of ingratitude. It helps us face the future with confidence –
like it helped my grandmother so long ago.
Scripture says: “I will remember
the deeds of the Lord: yes, I will remember your miracles of long ago.” (Psalm 77:1)
My grandmother had an old piano and she began singing her praises
to God as she played hymns on the piano.
She told me that it helped to sing out her thanks to God for all that He
had given her. She said that when she quietly
gave thanks to God sometimes her thoughts were still on herself and her
problems to some extent. But when she
sang out her praises she focused on God and His glory and all of her problems
faded. She told me that she felt that
she could sing her cares away easier than she could reason them away.
My grandmother chose to be thankful when it would have been
easy to grumble. And we can choose to be
thankful for the things we have instead of complaining about the things we
don’t have. It is so easy to
complain. I am very good at it so I
know. The antidote for grumbling is gratitude.
When the Israelites were in the desert traveling from Egypt to the
Promised Land they had so much to be thankful for but instead it seems they spent
much of their time grumbling!
God had miraculously delivered them from bondage and slavery
in Egypt and He had opened
up the Red Sea so that they could cross it and
not get caught by the Egyptians who were chasing after them. God fed them manna every day when they were
in the desert which was quite a number of years. (Numbers 11:4-6) And God miraculously gave them water that
sprung up out of a Rock when they were thirsty.
God led them and protected them all the way across the desert on their long
journey.
You would think that the Israelites would have thanked God
and praised Him for His many gifts and mercies during that difficult time! But no, Scripture says that the Israelites
fussed and grumbled all the way across the desert to the Promised Land. They
grumbled about the food that God provided and they fumed and didn’t trust God’s
leading and worried that they would never get into the Promised Land. They
missed the good old days in Egypt
when they had been slaves in chains. And
they grumbled because they were commanded not to worship idols like all their
neighbors did!
It seems that God took their grumbling personally, because God
angrily asked Moses: “How long will these people treat Me with contempt?
…” (Numbers 14:11a) Does God also take our grumbling personally
after all that He has done for us on our life journey?
There is a story in the Bible of a time when the Jewish
people like my grandmother, sang their songs and praises to God while He took
care of them. Scripture tells of a time
in antiquity when strong neighboring countries with large armies surrounded the
little tribe of Judah
and were preparing to attack and kill and destroy! The Jewish people were in big trouble! The king of Judah called for every Jewish
person to fast and pray and then he called everyone together to stand and sing
praises to God as the enemy approached.
And this is what happened. “As
they began to sing and praise, the Lord set ambushes against the men of Ammon
and Moab and Mount Seir
who were invading Judah ,
and they were defeated.” (2 Chronicles
20:22)
So as the people of Judah was singing and praising God
together, God confused the brutal band of soldiers who were rushing in for the
bloody kill screaming battle cries and waving swords and spears. God played a trick on these violent attackers
and messed up their brains. Instead of
slaughtering the men, women and children of Judah that they were going for,
these crazed enemies suddenly turned in confusion and began fighting one
another. Not one Jewish soldier had to
fight that day. They all just stood there
and sang praises to God and watched in amazement as their violent attackers
turned away and savaged one another as they went.
Some of us may have a day, like Habakkuk or even like the
ancient tribe of Judah . A day when it seems like everything is coming
against us. It is comforting to know
that we have God who loves us and we can turn from our own limitations to a God
who has no limitations. And from our own time limits and come to God who works
outside of time and doesn’t have to hurry.
There are no deadlines against which He has to work and He will hear our
prayers and take care of us in His own way and time. He has a plan and a purpose for each one of
us and He can do things that we never thought of or imagined possible. He can take care of problems that we considered
impossible.
We have a God who is everlasting and un-changing. He is full of grace and we are cleansed and
perfected and will be taken to glory through His overflowing grace. .We have so
much to be thankful for. Psalm 100:1-2
reads: “Make a joyful shout to the Lord,
all you lands! Serve the Lord with
gladness. Come before His presence with
singing.” If we are not already coming
before the Lord often with our thanksgiving, then let’s choose to start doing
that now. Let’s start counting our
blessings and thanking Him for each one every day.
Some of these ideas were taken from “A Daybook of Grace”– A
Year of Devotions – Mark Gilroy and Jessica Inman and Patti Hummell pp. 320-349.