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Sharing A Legacy of Gratitude

Sharing A Legacy of Gratitude

Dear Friends,

We’ve talked about leaving spiritual (non-material) legacies here before; this month I invite you to consider writing a “thank-you note” or a “legacy letter of gratitude” as a lasting gift to someone. I’d love to hear from you, so if you’re willing, please share your thoughts on one or both of the following questions in the comments or by hitting reply if you received this by email:

  • How do you feel about writing thank-you notes? 

  • How does a good thank-you note make you feel?

As we have celebrated the first birthdays of our first three grandchildren and have just welcomed the fourth, I find myself remembering my days as a mother of young children. Married to an orthopedic resident who often worked eighty-hour weeks, I needed help desperately, and my mother kicked it into high gear. Though she owned her own business and could hardly afford time away, she took off every Thursday afternoon and picked up our son for “Dede time,” beginning when he was six-months-old. She bought strollers and swings and special baby stuff we couldn’t afford on a resident’s salary. And as more and more children arrived, she continued to help, gamely taking on two and then three and eventually all four of them to give my husband and me some much-needed time alone. How grateful I am for her help. Now that she is gone, I wonder if I thanked her often enough. Thankfully, she left evidence of my gratitude: a bin full of notes and cards I sent over the years. But now that I am a grandmother, I find myself with a new level of admiration I’d love to express. 

Because our days are numbered, we want to be intentional about expressing our gratitude to people for the ways they have been carriers of God’s grace in our stories. Before we consider how to write our thank-you notes or letters of gratitude, let’s explore the basis for our gratitude. 

“Charis leads to eucharistia.” 

 

Charis is the Greek word for grace. Eucharistia is the Greek word for gratitude. Theologian Karl Barth wrote, “Charis always demands the answer eucharistia…Grace and gratitude belong together like heaven and earth. Grace evokes gratitude like the voice an echo. Gratitude follows grace as thunder follows lightning.” (Karl Barth, Church Dogmatics, quoted in Eugene Peterson, Living the Message, 58). 

In other words, a Christian, a recipient of life-changing grace, a formerly “dead man walking” who is now not only alive but freed in the freedom for which Christ set us free (see Ephesians 2:1; Galatians 5:1), cannot keep from dancing in the rhythm of gratitude.  Gratitude is the core of worship: “Thank you, God. Thank you, friend, for showing me the goodness of God. Thank you, blue and pink and purple cotton candy sky for pointing me to the glory of God.” Because grace is the essence of our lives as Christians, it follows that we would be people of gratitude who frequently express thanks intentionally. 

One way to leave a legacy of gratitude is to set aside a focused time to write or record our gratitude so people can revisit it when we’re no longer here to voice it. 

Writing a Legacy Thank-You Note

 

We can call our note a “thank-you note” or a “legacy letter of gratitude.” Choose the name that intimidates you the least because you’ll be more likely to complete the task. The goal is to give a lasting gift to the recipient. (Note: If you’re unable to write, consider recording with your phone. Most phones have a recording app these days. If you don’t know how to work the recording app, ask a younger friend or grandchild to help you. You could choose to do an audio or video recording.) 

To write your note or letter, try breaking it down into four fifteen-minute sessions. If you have more time and your ideas are flowing, keep going. If not, just keep scheduling your fifteen-minute sessions on your calendar to make sure you complete your note.

1. Session 1: Brainstorm.

Set a timer for fifteen minutes. Make a list of all the people you’d like to thank and list as many things you are thankful for as possible. See the suggested audiences below if you’re stuck:

  • one or both of your parents: ways God has blessed you, taught you, grown you, shown you…something through them…

  • your children or your friends: ways you see the likeness of Christ in them, ways they have loved you, ways they have redeemed you…

  • someone who has taught you something, who has passed on something to you…

  • God: ways he has rescued you, redeemed you, shown you his grace, healed you, loved you…

2. Session 2: Write rough and fast.

Set a timer for fifteen minutes. Choose one of the recipients above, and write your letter. Don’t worry about grammar or how it sounds at this point. Just try to get your main thoughts down. To help you be specific, consider some of the following questions:

• Describe the senses: What did you hear, taste, feel, see, smell, etc.? 

  • Were there particular places involved? (Your grandmother’s dining table set beautifully with silver and roses; your friend’s hunting cabin deep in the woods, etc.)

  • What happened? Was there a conflict? Was there a resolution?

  • What gift or grace did you experience?

  • What did you or do you see about God through the person or gift?

3. Session 3: Finish.

If you haven’t finished your note, set a timer for fifteen minutes and finish. 

4. Session 4: Edit and Rewrite.

Set a timer for fifteen minutes and edit your note or letter, rewriting it to make it say what you want it to say, to sound how you want it to sound. Again, don’t be overly concerned about grammar or spelling: the recipient will be thrilled to receive this gift and won’t be concerned about these things. 

5. Bonus Session 5: Process.

Set a timer for five minutes and write about how writing the letter affected you. 

  • What did you feel as you wrote?

  • Did you see anything new about yourself, about God, or about others as you wrote?

  • Did any new hopes come as a result of the writing?Also, I’d love to hear the answers to any of these questions, so please share in the comments if you’d like.

A Prayer about Gratitude for Children

A Prayer about Gratitude for Children

And Jesus said, ‘Let the little children come to me, and do not hinder them, for the kingdom of God belongs to such as these.’ Matthew 19:14

Heavenly Father,

Today, several days before Mother’s Day,

I am counting my blessings

for how you have worked through my children 

to humble me, to shape me, to redeem me. 

Whether we have children or not, 

may we recognize their value, 

not in the child-centric way our culture does, 

but in the Jesus-centric way the Bible demonstrates. 

The disciples tried to shoo the children away 

when parents brought them to Jesus, 

but Jesus corrected them, 

saying that the “kingdom of God belongs to such as these” (Matthew 19:14). 

Why? Why does the kingdom of God belong to people like children? 

Because children in healthy families 

fully understand their dependence on their parents to supply all their needs. 

Healthy children don’t think it’s all up to them to make things happen, 

they don’t think they’re the ones in control of their own lives (except for three-year-olds), 

and they don’t think they’re stronger than they are. 

Healthy children turn to their parents for help, comfort, hope;

Healthy children do what their parents tell them to do, 

believing their parents have their good in mind.

And even though most children don’t act that way, we are your children, the children of the only perfect parent.

May we come to you as such children would. 

In Jesus’ calling name. Amen. 

A Prayer about Pausing to Remember God’s Wondrous Works

A Prayer about Pausing to Remember God’s Wondrous Works

On your wondrous works, I will meditate. Psalm 145:5

Wondrously Working Lord,

How often do we pause, 

do we really chew on, 

the millions of ways, 

seen and unseen, 

you work in this world, 

in our neighborhood, 

in our lives?

For a few moments, 

let’s consider your wondrous works:

You’ve  drawn us to yourself 

even when we were wandering around like the spiritual zombies we were.

You’ve loved us every day, all the time, 

even when we hated you.

You’ve given us new life 

even when we deserved certain death,

You’ve kept your promises to us 

even when we broke every promise we ever made to you,

You’ve shown us limitless patience 

even when we threw tantrums of impatience with you.

You’ve lavished us with the gifts we needed 

even when we demanded the things we wanted when we wanted them. 

[List some of the specific wondrous works God has done in your life].

Oh, Lord, may we break our eyes away 

from the seductive screen 

and look out, look up, look in, 

to see your stunning beauty and your baffling kindness!

In Jesus’ gracious name. Amen. 

Read Psalm 145.

A Prayer about Missing the Obvious

A Prayer about Missing the Obvious

And beginning with Moses and all the Prophets, he interpreted to them in all the Scriptures the things concerning himself. Luke 24:27

Risen Lord,

This story reminds us that William Shakespeare 

was not the first person to use dramatic irony to humorous effect. 

You walked along the road with two of your followers all the way to Emmaus. 

They thought you were really out of it 

not to have heard anything about 

“Jesus of Nazareth, 

a man who was a prophet mighty in deed and word…

and how our chief priests and rulers 

delivered him up to be condemned to death and crucified him” (Luke 24:19-20).

What did your heart feel 

when you heard their aching disappointment: 

“But we had hoped that he was the one to redeem Israel” (Luke 24:21)?

We don’t know, but we do know you gave these two followers 

the best Bible study ever, 

showing them how all of Scripture 

pointed to your redemption of not only Israel 

but of every tribe, tongue, nation, and people group (Luke 24:27).

You arrived at the village, 

accepting their invitation to dine with them.

You “took the bread and blessed and broke it and gave it to them” (Luke 24:30). 

Only then were their “eyes opened and they recognized him” (Luke 24:31).

Lord, we have been given so much more opportunity 

to see you than these two followers. 

May we never be blind to your risen presence 

among us through the Holy Spirit. 

May we seek you in the Scriptures morning by morning, 

day by day, knowing the truth about you 

flashes at us from every direction like the neon signs on Broadway. 

And may we, in recognizing the reality of your resurrection, 

worship you by telling others this profoundly good news. 

In your ever-present name. Amen.

Read Luke 24:13-35.

A Prayer about the Hope for Sins, Transgressions, and Iniquities

A Prayer about the Hope for Sins, Transgressions, and Iniquities

For I know my transgressions, and my sin is ever before me. Psalm 51:3

God of Abundant Mercy,

We return to David’s prayer of confession today 

to name our own sins, transgressions, and iniquities:

We know our transgression—

ways we’ve crossed the line, 

taken your good gifts and turned them into demands.

[Name some ways you’ve crossed the line.]

We need cleansing from our sin—

ways we’ve fallen short 

of the high mark Jesus set 

for loving our friends, family, neighbors, and enemies.

[Name some ways you’ve fallen short of the love Jesus commands.]

We need to be washed thoroughly from our iniquity—

our distorted way of seeing the world and walking in it, 

for indeed, we were born in iniquity (Psalm 51:2; 5).

[Name some ways your view of God’s world is distorted.]

We know our desperate need for a Savior, 

and we thank you and praise you 

for the perfectly righteous One you sent, 

who died that we may be washed 

“whiter than snow” (Psalm 51:7).

In Jesus’ freeing name. Amen. 

(Thanks to ligonier.org for their helpful article, “What is the difference between sin, transgression, and iniquity?”).

A Prayer about Giving Thanks to Our God

A Prayer about Giving Thanks to Our God

You are my God, and I will give thanks to you; you are my God; I will extol you. Oh give thanks to the Lord, for he is good; for his steadfast love endures forever. Psalm 118:28

Loving Lord,

May we address you as this psalmist does:

Firmly, emphatically, declaring:

“You are my God,” 

not my children, my work, 

my dating life, my sports, my home, 

or any other thing on this earth 

that we sometimes serve and worship.

And oh, how thankful we are, 

with the psalmist, 

that you are our God, 

because you have rescued us 

“out of [our] distress and set [us] free” (Psalm 118:5). 

[Name some of the distress he rescued you out of.]

Because you sent your Son to us, we “extol” you—

we praise you, 

we talk about how great you are and how much we love you.

[Name some things you love about God.]

And then, like the psalmist, 

we turn to others and invite them into our praise:

“Oh, give thanks to the Lord, for he is good…” 

because we know your praise 

was always intended to be sung in a chorus, not as a solo.

In Jesus’ steadfast name. Amen.

Read Psalm 118:1-29.

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