Give thanks in all circumstances.
What does that mean, anyway?
Yesterday, I did not want to give thanks. The power went out at 7 am. I had huge loads of laundry to do that obviously would not happen. It was hot. Our house is dark. My house worker was sick. How would I get everything done? At 6:45 pm, when we realized it still wasn’t coming on, we sent out dozens of text messages to our students, changing the location of Youth Group. The power came back on at 10 pm last night. Lots of chatter in the Dar community about this and we all are coming to the sad realization that electricity rationing has started again, even though the power company has yet to publicly announce it. That means that the 15 hours without power yesterday will probably be a regular occurrence.
Yet I am told to give thanks in all circumstances.
This morning my eyes popped open at 6 am, early for a Saturday. Immediately I thought, “I’ve got to get the laundry in the machine while the power is on.”
The laundry went in, the flour came out. I spent the morning doing what I love: creating with dough. The washing machine hummed and my electric beaters whipped up the cream beautifully. There’s my thankful heart.
My gardener called me outside. “There’s a problem,” he said, “A small one.” He told me he was fixing a drain outside our house by pulling up some concrete slabs that cover our drain pipes. He pulled up the slab for me. “Wadudu,” he said. Bugs.
I looked inside the hole and shrieked. There were about 100 cockroaches of varying sizes. “SO THAT’S WHERE THEY HAVE BEEN COMING FROM!” Those nasty, nasty creatures who are not fit to live have been creeping into my kitchen cupboards. Two inches long, those beasties are.
I raced into the house, grabbed the insecticide, and proceeded to empty the entire aerosol container into the hole. “DIE!” I screeched. My gardener must have thought I had completely lost it.
Does God want me to be thankful for cockroaches?
Be thankful in all circumstances.
The afternoon was easy. At our friend Kathy’s house for our “Thanksgiving Saturday,” turkey with all the trimmings, a group of friends ranging from ages 2 to 65. Laughter, chattering, exclamations over every dish served and “Can I get this recipe?” Kids hyped up on sugar barreling through the house. Just like a Thanksgiving should be, except without the blood relations. It was a wonderful day. Easy to be thankful.
But…Be thankful in all circumstances. All. Not griping, not complaining…but trusting His goodness and His Sovereignty in every situation.
I still have a long way to go.
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Anonymous
great post amy!
Jen
You inspire and convict me all at the same time.
hale mary
Amy, I bet you were thankful for insecticide. There is always something to be thankful for 🙂