July 03, 2026
Gratitude for the blessings of God is itself one of the greatest blessings.
Al-Ghazali wrote this during a period of deep personal crisis, after he had left his prestigious teaching post in Baghdad around 1095 CE, walking away from fame and wealth because he felt his public life had become spiritually hollow. He spent years in retreat, studying his own inner life with the same rigor he had once applied to theology. This line carries that weight — it comes from someone who had actually tested whether comfort and recognition produce gratitude, and found they do not. What he discovered instead is that noticing a blessing and naming it as such is itself something to be thankful for, which makes gratitude self-reinforcing rather than dependent on circumstances.
Reflection
Think about one specific thing you received this week that you did not earn or ask for. What stopped you from recognizing it as a gift when it arrived?
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