Quotes about Gratitude
There is no comfort, I find, in any enjoyment, without enjoying God, and being engaged in his service.
— Jonathan Edwards
To those whose eyes may fall on these lines, may I not be excused saying, 'See to it that you honour your father and your mother, not only that your days may be long in the land, but that you may not, in after years, be disturbed by useless longings to have back again the precious ones who so ceaselessly and unselfishly toiled with heart and brain for your profoundest well-being.
— Jonathan Edwards
Do not spoil what you have by desiring what you have not; remember that what you have was once among the things you only hoped for.
— Epicurus
If you want to make a man happy, add not unto his riches but take away from his desires.
— Epicurus
The Scriptures were plain and could not be gainsaid on this most basic point: all that was his—his wealth, his talents, his time—was not really his. It all belonged to God and had been given to him to use for God's purposes and according to God's will. God had blessed him so that he, in turn, might bless others, especially those less fortunate than himself.
— Eric Metaxas
belongs to death, or, still more so, to the devil. We must buy it from him and return it to God, to whom it must really belong."—"If we inquire the will of God, free from all doubt and all mistrust, we shall discover it."—"Always give thanks for all things."—"Everything we cannot thank God for, we reproach him for.
— Eric Metaxas
I thank God that I live in the age of Wilberforce and that I know one man at least who is both moral and entertaining.
— Eric Metaxas
You have learned from him to honor the will of God in everything God gives and in everything God takes away.
— Eric Metaxas
However thankful we may be for all our personal pleasures, we mustn't for a moment lose sight of the great things that we're living for, and they must shed light rather than gloom on your joy.
— Eric Metaxas
Indeed, when Luther's school-yard chum Hans Reinecke wrote to him of his father's death, Luther wrote, "Seldom if ever have I despised death as much as I do now." He said that it "has plunged me into deep sadness not only because he was my father but also because he loved me very much." Even more, he says, "through him my creator has given me all that I am and have.
— Eric Metaxas
He's already done that for us. We need only accept his free gift. And if we see the magnitude of that gift, we are moved to do good things. But it is as gratitude for what God has already done in saving us, not as a way of earning our own salvation. Once we receive God's free gift of love in Jesus, we are properly moved to want to love him back and to love our fellow man.
— Eric Metaxas
But after all, it is a very pretty pass indeed. And how very glad we are that one man led us to that pretty pass, to that golden doorway, and then guided us through the mountains to a world we hadn't known could exist.
— Eric Metaxas