How Gratitude Rewires the Soul: The Surprising Power of Thankfulness

How Gratitude Rewires the Soul: The Surprising Power of Thankfulness

Written by Rob Shive, MA, LPC – Founder & CEO, Oakland Hills Counseling, LLC


 

Intro – Questions to Consider

What if gratitude isn’t just a feeling that follows the good moments of life, but a spiritual practice that creates them?

What if learning to give thanks in all circumstances, as Scripture teaches us, could actually rewire your emotional world and help you live with more peace, resilience, and connection to God?

Most of us treat gratitude as an afterthought, like something we feel once life goes our way. I know I certainly have. But Scripture teaches us something radically different. Gratitude is a discipline or a spiritual practice, not a reaction. It’s the deliberate and purposeful reorientation of our hearts toward God’s goodness, even when your feelings lag behind. It’s not pretending everything is okay; it’s remembering the reality that God is with us!

 


 

Insights – Dynamic to Understand

The human brain wasn’t designed to make you happy; it was designed to keep you alive. Social scientists call this the negativity bias. We have a built-in alarm system that automatically scans our world for what’s wrong, missing, or threatening. This reflexive bias was helpful for our ancestors who were threatened by predators or famine, but it’s not a helpful psychophysiological system for cultivating joy or spiritual peace in modern life.

Every day your mind collects evidence to produce and maintain fear, frustration, or disappointment. This just runs in the background on autopilot. Gratitude interrupts that instinctive habit. It shifts our mental focus from threat detection to grace detection. It teaches the nervous system to rest, the heart to expand, and the soul to recognize God’s presence in places it was once overlooked.

Neuroscientists have found that practicing consistent gratitude increases activity in the medial prefrontal cortex—the part of the brain linked to empathy, moral awareness, and positive emotion.¹ In other words, the simple act of giving thanks to God doesn’t just change your mood, it actually changes your brain’s neurological structure(s).

Spiritually, the same truth has been practiced for centuries. The Psalms are filled with examples of God’s people moving from lament to gratitude. “Why, my soul, are you downcast? . . . Put your hope in God, for I will yet praise him, my Savior and my God” (Psalm 42:11). Gratitude is the bridge between despair and hope, and often turns the soul from self-preoccupation to spiritual awareness of God’s presence.

As a counselor, I have had the privilege of watching brave clients discover that practicing gratitude doesn’t deny pain, it reframes it. It helps them locate grace and God’s presence while inside the hardship, not just after it’s gone.

 


Gratitude is more than a positive feeling when things are going our way; it’s a spiritual practice that transforms your heart to notice and honor God’s presence.

 

Integration – Research to Inform

Gratitude has been studied across nearly every field of psychology—from neuroscience to clinical therapy, to behavioral medicine—and the findings consistently affirm what Scripture has said for millennia: thanksgiving transforms the soul.

A team of researchers at the University of California found that people who intentionally recorded blessings for just ten weeks reported higher levels of joy, better sleep, and greater optimism compared to those who focused on daily hassles.² Brain-imaging studies later confirmed that writing gratitude letters to friends or family members or keeping a gratitude journal literally strengthens neural pathways associated with emotional regulation and empathy.³ Amazing!

But gratitude’s influence doesn’t stop in the mind, it also shows up in the body. A study of heart patients completed in 2015 discovered that those who cultivated daily gratitude had lower levels of inflammation and better sleep quality than those who didn’t.⁴ In short, gratitude lowers our stress response and increases our peace response, even within our nervous system.

It’s no coincidence that the word thanksgiving in Scripture is often tied to peace. Philippians 4:6–7 reminds us, “Do not be anxious about anything, but in every situation, by prayer and petition, with thanksgiving, present your requests to God. And the peace of God, which transcends all understanding, will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus” (Philippians 4:6–7).

Modern research is simply catching up to divine design. Gratitude changes not only how we feel, but how we function—neurologically, emotionally, and spiritually.

 


The human brain wasn’t designed to make you happy; it was designed to keep you alive. Social scientists call it the negativity bias. We have a built-in alarm system that automatically scans our world for what’s wrong, missing, or threatening.

 

Formation – Principle to Practice

Again, gratitude is not a denial of suffering; it’s an act of faith in the middle of it. The Apostle Paul, writing from prison, urged believers to “Give thanks in all circumstances; for this is God’s will for you in Christ Jesus.” (1 Thessalonians 5:18, NIV)

Notice he didn’t say for all circumstances, but in them. Gratitude is the humble attitude of trusting God that says, “Even here, God is still working. I’m choosing to trust Him.” It’s the antidote to despair because it realigns our heart with reality, the reality of a sovereign and good God.

Spiritually, gratitude acts as a magnifying glass. Whatever we focus on gets bigger. When we magnify the problem, anxiety grows. When we magnify God’s faithfulness, peace begins to grow. Gratitude doesn’t erase pain, but it reveals that God’s presence is larger than it.

In counseling people whose lives were marked by trauma or disappointment, I’ve seen that the turning point often comes when they begin to practice gratitude not as a feeling, but as an act of worship and humble obedience. As one client said to me, “Gratitude didn’t make my pain disappear, it gave a way to hold on to God in the midst of my suffering.”

 


“We are surrounded by God’s benefits. The best use of these benefits is an unceasing expression of gratitude.”  — John Calvin

 

Scripture – Truth to Claim

There’s a lot of buzz these days about the personal benefits of practicing gratitude, which is a good thing, we just listed a few. But, gratitude is more than a self-help project. At Oakland Hills Counseling, we’re aiming for something much deeper than positive feelings, we all want that. Cultivating gratitude as a spiritual practice is about character transformation and an ever-growing capacity to experience closeness with God. Again, gratitude is an act of worship where our souls connect with the God of the universe! It’s a spiritual lens that reveals God’s goodness where fear once blocked our spiritual eyes. It’s a declaration that the story isn’t over, that redemption is unfolding even when it’s hard to see.

When we give thanks, we are saying to our souls: God you are still trustworthy, thank you!

David modeled this in Psalm 103, “Praise the Lord, my soul; all my inmost being, praise his holy name. Praise the Lord, my soul, and forget not all his benefits—who forgives all your sins and heals all your diseases, who redeems your life from the pit and crowns you with love and compassion” (Psalm 103:1–4).

Gratitude restores memory—our spiritual memory. We remember who God is, what He’s done, and who we are in Him. When we remember, peace will eventually return.

 


“Enter His gates with thanksgiving and His courts with praise; give thanks to Him and praise His name. For the Lord is good and His love endures forever; His faithfulness continues through all generations.”  (Psalms 100:4-5)

Application – Step to Take

I don’t know about you, but giving thanks in the middle of suffering and difficulty is a lot easier said than done. And, as we discussed earlier, we all have a negative bias that tends to focus on whatever feels wrong, threatening, or painful. So, we all need help and practice with emotional and spiritual re-formation, building a new habit of gratitude. Start small. Before bed tonight, take five minutes to name three specific things you’re grateful for—people, moments, or simple gifts. Write them down, then pray a short prayer like this:

“Lord, thank You for these gifts. Thank You for Your presence today. Teach me to notice Your goodness tomorrow, and that you are with me, even in the hard and painful places in my life.”

Try this for at least seven days. Watch how your outlook begins to shift, how sleep comes easier, and how your heart grows softer. Once again, gratitude will not erase hardship, but in time, it will keep hardship from erasing hope.

As you continue this spiritual formational practice, remember that gratitude is a spiritual muscle; the more you use it, the stronger it gets. And over time, gratitude doesn’t just change how you feel, it changes who you’re becoming. And, that’s worth being grateful for!

 


 

Reflection – Deeper Dive

  • What are three small blessings you can thank God for today?
  • Where might gratitude help reframe something painful in your current season?
  • How could you use thanksgiving as a spiritual rhythm, not just a reaction?
  • Who could I share with and will support my growth-steps in the practice of gratitude?

 


 

Author Byline

Rob Shive, MA, LPC – Founder & CEO, Oakland Hills Counseling, LLC
www.oaklandhillscounseling.com  | Follow us: Instagram

 


 

Endnotes

  1. Kini, P., Wong, J., McInnis, S., Gabana, N., & Brown, J. W. (2016). The effects of gratitude expression on neural activity. NeuroImage, 128, 1–10.
  2. Emmons, R. A., & McCullough, M. E. (2003). Counting blessings versus burdens: An experimental investigation of gratitude and subjective well-being in daily life. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 84(2), 377–389.
  3. Davis, D. E., et al. (2016). Thankful for the little things: A meta-analysis of gratitude interventions. Journal of Counseling Psychology, 63(1), 20–31.
  4. Mills, P. J., et al. (2015). The role of gratitude in spiritual well-being, sleep, and inflammatory markers in heart failure patients. Spirituality in Clinical Practice, 2(1), 5–17.

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