Back to Eden: Reconnecting With God Through NatureНамуна
The Gratitude Solution
Gratitude is not an easy thing to practice at times like these. When living through such a lengthy period of uncertainty, sadness and anxiety, giving thanks can feel like the last thing we want to do.
The more you delve into the climate crisis, the more nightmarish it becomes. At the beginning of the year, a group of leading scientists warned of a "ghastly future of mass extinction, declining health and climate-disruption upheavals". This can feel disempowering – what can we as individuals do about the climate of a whole planet?
But what if gratitude did not need to be a casualty of these difficult days, but instead could be a remedy for them?
Gratitude is an antidote to despair. It reminds us that we have faced challenges before, and overcome them. It reminds us that God is bigger than our circumstances. And it reminds us that, no matter what else is going on, there is always much we can love – and love never fails.
It is often when gratitude feels like the hardest thing to do that it is the most important thing to do. You do not need to feel grateful to give thanks, but giving thanks can make you feel more grateful.
This is why Paul declared in the New Testament, "Rejoice always, pray continually, give thanks in all circumstances; for this is God’s will for you in Christ Jesus."
Always. Continually. In all circumstances. That’s quite the challenge. And yet gratitude is a muscle – the more we put it to use, the stronger it becomes. And the stronger it becomes, the more it can help transform our lives and the world around us.
We are unlikely to protect what we do not love, and we are unlikely to love what we do not know. Gratitude can bring us into a greater knowing of the world; it nourishes our love, making it grow and, in doing so, making us want to do more to protect it.
Pray with us
Here are three gratitude practices that can help us draw closer to creation. Choose whichever one appeals to you most and set yourself the challenge of trying it every day for a whole week. You can always try more than one!
1. Say grace
The decline of the traditional dinner table meal in recent years has led to the decline of another tradition – saying grace. Yet this can be a beautiful way to connect us with creation.
Before each meal, take time to think about the food on your plate, and give thanks for it.
Thank God for the farms and the farmers; for the sunlight, the rain and the soil; and for the lives of the animals and plants who give us sustenance.
2. Take a gratitude walk
Why not combine your daily exercise with prayers of gratitude for creation? As you are walking around your local area, take notice of creation. Whether you live in the city or the countryside, God’s good works surround you.
Grass. Trees. Birds. Sky. All created by God. All indications of glory and goodness. As you walk, pay close attention to these things, and give thanks.
3. Keep a gratitude journal
Gratitude journals are helpful ways to cultivate more thankfulness in our lives. If you do not already have one, find a notebook you can write in every day. Or, simply use a note-taking app on your computer or phone.
Every day, write down something about creation that you love. It could be the song of a blackbird. Or the feeling of snow crunching underfoot. Or a particular landscape you enjoy looking at. Hold it in your heart as you write.
Scripture
About this Plan
Nature nourishes us. It is amidst nature that we discover God’s role as our provider and pathmaker. This devotional, written by Gideon Heugh, was created to remind us that we have a standing invitation to enter into God’s presence and reconnect with Him through the beauty of His creation.
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