Thankful For Other Humans
Are you grateful for all the people who cross your path?
Verse of the Day
‘I urge you, first of all, to pray for all people. Ask God to help them; intercede on their behalf, and give thanks for them. ‘
Today’s Devotional
Paul is writing a letter to Timothy to give him some encouragement and instruction. Today’s verse comes from the first of Paul’s letters to Timothy, and it includes many directives. Part of Paul’s instruction to Timothy about being a leader in the faith includes this urgent message that he be a person of prayer for all people.
I don’t know about you, but I do not pray for all people. I know people who are diligent in praying for others. I am not one of those people. If you ask me to pray for you, or your cousin’s friend’s roommate, I will do it. But probably only once.
For the purposes of being obedient to this verse in God’s Word, let’s look at what “all people” might mean. Who should we be praying for?
- National leaders – whether we agree with them or not
- State and local authorities – whether we agree with them or not
- Church leaders – at all churches, not just our own
- Law Enforcement – whose job is to keep us safe
- Our family – ALL of them
- Our church family – ALL of them
- Our friends – the ones we see often and those we rarely get to be with
- Our acquaintances – ALL of the people we know
- Those we randomly encounter – the people we cross paths with on a daily basis
Thinking over the above list, we are told to pray for, intercede on behalf of, ask God’s help for, and GIVE THANKS for all of these people. That’s a lot of people to be praying for. And I’m sure my list above is far from complete. How in the world are we supposed to do this?
As in many situations, my first answer is, “I have no idea.” But if I combine a few other truths that I learn in Scripture, then maybe this task becomes more manageable. We are told to pray without ceasing, which to me means that my life (especially my thought life) is a never ending conversation with the Lord. So anytime someone comes into my sight or my mind, I should be giving thanks for that person and praying for God to be with and help that person.
When I walk into a room and the news is on, I should thank God for our political leaders and pray God’s protection over them and ask that God guide their decisions.
When I am speeding and a cop is pulling me over, I should thank God for this person who chose to be a civil servant to keep me safe. I should pray for God’s protection for their physical safety as they perform a dangerous job. (I should also treat this cop with respect and take responsibility for my own actions. If I was speeding, then I need to own the consequences of that with dignity. After all, I am representing Jesus.)
When dealing with anyone who crosses my path, whether physically, mentally, or virtually, I should be thanking God for each person and praying for them. By name.
OK…. This feels like graduate-level spiritual discipline stuff. So let’s make it simple. For today, let’s thank God for every single person we encounter: in our thoughts, in our physical presence, in our email, in our social media, in Zoom meetings, in our text messages, in our phone calls, and anywhere else we encounter other humans. Would our world be different if we all did this?
Journal Prompts
Answer only the questions that seem relevant to you today.
How would your day be different if you chose to be grateful “for all people”?
Why do you think Paul gave Timothy this advice?
How would your life be different if all people you encountered were grateful for you?
Are you willing to try to be grateful for every person who blips on your radar today?
Comments
In spite of my judgmental, intolerant nature I must remember that all of us are children of our creator, created in His image. Who am I to be less than thankful?