Counting your blessings promotes  good physical health, according to a study by some doctors. Volunteers who kept weekly gratitude diaries reported fewer aches and pains than those who recorded daily hassles or neutral events.

A ‘gratitude visit’ was developed by Dr Martin E. P. Seligman to promote strong emotional health. He tells people to think of someone who has made an important difference in their lives. He asks them to write the story of how that person has helped them and then to visit that person and read the story aloud. Tests show that a year later the people who had done so were happier and reported fewer episodes of depression. Even more important, think of what it must have done for those who were thanked!

The apostle Paul had a long list of people who had helped him and for whom he was grateful (Rom. 16:1-16). He wrote that Phoebe had ‘been a helper’, Priscilla and Aquila had ‘risked their own necks’ for his life and Mary had “laboured much” for him. And he took time to write his thanks in a letter to the church at Rome.

Who has helped to shape your life? Could you make a gratitude visit—for their sake, and for yours?


Gratitude should not be an occasional incidentbut a continuous attitude.

Author

Anne Cetas

Topics

Our Daily Bread