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Gratitude

Why Giving Thanks Is the Key to Our Well-Being

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
What is gratitude? Where does it come from? Why do we need it? How does it change us? In Gratitude, award-winning author Cornelius Plantinga explores these questions and more. Celebrating the role of gratitude in our lives, Plantinga makes the case that it is the very key to understanding our relationships with one another, the world around us, and God. Going deeper than mindfulness and positive psychology, Plantinga explores gratitude in a theologically informed and pastorally sensitive way. He shows that being grateful to God is not only our righteous duty but also the single best predictor of our well-being. Gratitude makes us more faithful, joyful, generous, healthy, and content. While it's easy to focus on the suffering, fear, and worries that surround us, Plantinga places all of that in the larger context of provision, abundance, and delight, empowering listeners to experience the deep joy of giving thanks.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      November 20, 2023
      Christianity “is a religion of... gratitude, centering on Jesus’s brave sacrifice of his life,” posits theologian Plantinga (Under the Wings of God) in this astute response to the perennial question, “How can I seriously thank God when the world seems so awful?” Among other aspects, gratitude involves finding “the good in a bad situation” (those with debilitating illnesses can become “exquisitely sensitive to the offsetting blessings they enjoy despite it all,” Plantinga points out) and nurturing that for which one is thankful, including one’s faith (by “pray when we don’t feel like it... we meditate on God’s Word, hoping for a ray of light”). Noting that “gratitude triggered by the memory of goodness is a classic biblical pattern,” Plantinga cites the Bible’s many exhortations for Israelites to remember God’s “mighty hand and outstretched arm” in delivering them from Egypt. While the author’s short lists of how-tos borrow mostly from traditional self-help (writing a list of things one is grateful for; imitating others’ acts of gratitude), his observations about gratitude’s nuances and complexities resonate, as when he acknowledges that it coexists with sin and pain, something often ignored in “unrelievedly cheerful” evangelical services (“How do we thank God for forgiving our sin when we won’t talk about our sin?”). This worthy meditation on an essential state of being uplifts without sugarcoating.

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  • OverDrive Listen audiobook

Languages

  • English

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