To be grateful is to recognize the love of God in everything He has given us—and He has given us everything.
Thomas Merton

To Be Grateful
Topic: Gratitude
To be grateful is to recognize the love of God in everything He has given us—and He has given us everything. Every breath we draw is a gift of His love, every moment of existence is grace, for it brings with us immense graces from Him. Gratitude therefore takes nothing for granted, is never unresponsive, is constantly awakening to new wonder, and to praise of the goodness of God. For the grateful person knows that God is good, not by hearsay but by experience. And that is what makes all the difference.
Thomas Merton (born January 31, 1915, in Prades, France – died December 10, 1968, in Bangkok, Thailand) was a Trappist monk, writer, poet, and spiritual thinker whose life bridged the worlds of contemplation and social engagement. The son of artists—an American mother and a New Zealand father—Merton spent his early years in France, England, and the United States. After losing both parents at a young age, he pursued studies at Cambridge and later at Columbia University, where he earned a master’s degree in English literature. Though immersed in the intellectual and cultural life of New York, Merton experienced a profound spiritual awakening that led to his conversion to Catholicism in 1938.
In 1941, seeking solitude and union with God, Merton entered the Abbey of Gethsemani in Kentucky. Within the cloister, he discovered not an escape from the world but a deeper way of engaging it. His autobiography, The Seven Storey Mountain (1948), recounting his restless youth and the path to his monastic vocation, became an unexpected bestseller, resonating with postwar readers searching for direction and meaning. Over the following decades, Merton wrote prolifically—journals, essays, poetry, and spiritual reflections—exploring prayer, contemplation, identity, and the presence of God in the midst of ordinary life. Works such as New Seeds of Contemplation and No Man Is an Island express his conviction that true contemplation is rooted in love, attention, and the recognition of divine presence in all creation.
In his later years, Merton emerged as a powerful voice for interfaith dialogue, peace, and social justice. He corresponded with spiritual figures such as the Dalai Lama, Thich Nhat Hanh, and D.T. Suzuki, discovering resonances between Christian mysticism and Eastern contemplative traditions. His writings on nonviolence, racial justice, and nuclear disarmament reflected a spirituality that united inner transformation with moral responsibility. Merton’s untimely death during an interreligious conference in Thailand marked the end of a life devoted to bridging contemplation and compassion. His legacy endures as an invitation to seek God in silence, to live truthfully, and to recognize the deep unity that underlies the world’s divisions.
Thoughts in Solitude
Merton, Thomas. Thoughts in Solitude. Farrar, Straus, Giroux, 1998, p. 33 [Thoughts in Solitude by Thomas Merton (1956)].
Thomas Merton
Theme: Gratefulness

About This Thomas Merton Quote
Thomas Merton begins with a plain definition: “To be grateful is to recognize the love of God in everything He has given us—and He has given us everything.” Gratitude starts as recognition—seeing “the love of God” in what is already given, and letting “He has given us everything” set the scale. The point is not a rare feeling, but an honest seeing of gift.
He then brings that recognition down to what is most constant: “Every breath we draw is a gift of His love, every moment of existence is grace.” If breath is “a gift” and each moment “grace,” then gratitude “takes nothing for granted” and is “never unresponsive.” It stays “constantly awakening to new wonder,” and it turns naturally “to praise of the goodness of God.”
Thomas Merton closes by naming the difference this makes: “For the grateful person knows that God is good, not by hearsay but by experience. And that is what makes all the difference.” Gratitude becomes a way of knowing—moving from “hearsay” to “experience.” In that lived knowledge, we keep returning to what he has already said: “every breath,” “every moment,” and “everything” given in love.
Parker J. Palmer
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