When Good Gifts are More than a List

At times, words about goodness have felt vanilla to me, like preschool basics.
God is good.
The sky is blue.
I’ve longed for a goodness that means more than empty positivity.
More than rote fact.
More than a decade ago, when I was newly married and just entering my twenties, Nano and I sat with a group of church friends who were planning a Thanksgiving gathering. One woman suggested inviting the guests to share four things they were thankful for. Everyone seemed to like her idea.
Internally, I sighed. I didn’t understand this and thought we may as well recite our grocery lists to each other.
I wondered what might fit what they were looking for, while also feeling more meaningful. I shared the first thought that came to mind.
“What if we share one thing we’re thankful for and then four reasons why we’re thankful for that?”
They blinked at me and offered polite words acknowledging my idea.
The day of the gathering came and I listened as people shared their four-point lists of things they were thankful for. I can’t remember if I recited a list myself. I just remember looking around the room at this group—most of whom had seen many more years of life than I had. I couldn’t understand why this didn’t feel so mundane to everyone else.
Thirteen years later, the memory stays with me.
I put myself back in that room at the age I am now, and I’ve still seen less years than most of them. Maybe though, I’m a little closer to understanding what they knew.
When dreams you’ve hoped for blow away in the wind, when paths you walk turn to somber roads, when the sky around you grows dark, the clouds teach you what you never could’ve learned in the light.
Along the journey of life’s disappointments, the soul learns how to see that no matter what blows away, no matter how grave the story, there is always a bird who still sings.
The rote facts you learned in preschool become lifelines that save you.
God is good.
The sky is blue.
When a voice inside asks me what I have left, there is still the voice of a child in my distant memory. She sings her alphabet, letter by letter, and somehow every syllable of ordinary life becomes the sweetest song I’ve ever heard.
Built into the fabric of this life, into the sound of every letter we work with each day, is a Voice that echoes quietly beneath every harsh blow.
God saw all that he had made, and it was very good.
He looked with delight and said, “You are very good.”
From the beginning, goodness was there. Today, His goodness remains.
Last week, my family munched popcorn and watched Tom Hanks in Castaway. After he loses everything, then years later loses everything again, he tells a friend what he knows.
“I know what I have to do now. I’ve got to keep breathing. Because tomorrow the sun will rise. Who knows what the tide will bring?”
The sun still rises, and the goodness God made in the beginning is still alive.
I remembered myself at age twenty. I sat in a room where I couldn’t hear more than a grocery list. I wanted to hear the reasons why. Little did I know that when we recognize what is good, we are naming the reasons why—the reasons why we breathe.
These are the signs there is goodness.
This is the meaning that keeps us open to meet another day.










