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A Compliment is Manna from Heaven

  • Jim Kok
  • Jul 10
  • 2 min read
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The man had done something very helpful for me, so I gave him a small gift in appreciation. He took it, wadded it up, dropped it on the ground, stomped on it, and threw it back at me.


The above incident is a metaphor for the common experience of paying compliments.


Very often, compliments bounce off their target as if unwanted, and they are even flung back indifferently. It sounds like the saintliest of attitudes when the appreciated preacher retorts, "Don't thank me, just praise the Lord."


But the grateful parishioner feels rebuffed, and feels straight-armed away with a 'pious' platitude.


A compliment is a gift. It is an act of care . . . an act of kindness . . . to give a compliment. Thank you for doing it as much as you do. But, my thoughts today are more about the other side of the transaction . . . accepting the words offered.


Accepting compliments, for some strange reason, is difficult for a lot of people. Instead of saying thank you, and receiving the gift, they act as if they didn't want to hear it. The exquisite meal prepared by a hardworking homemaker is shrugged off as "something I threw together in a minute." The attractive dress, praised, is discounted as "something from a bargain basement."


Teenagers, too, seem to suffer from compliment aversion. Handling one comfortably is a rarity. They tend to shove them frantically away, as if afraid of contamination by the positive regard of an adult.


My own conversion from tending to be a gift-rejecter to learning to be a grateful accepter happened at the door of Trinity Church. I had just preached the morning sermon, and I had taken my customary position at the back door to greet the departing worshippers. A young woman stopped, shook my hand, and commented, "That was a very good message."


While inwardly glowing from this endorsement, I gave my usual disclaimer along these lines: "It seemed a little long to me."


To which she countered firmly, "Why can't you accept a compliment?"


Stung, I started thinking and repenting. She had given me a gift of herself and I batted it back as if unneeded. My response was dishonest and unkind. Truthfully, I deeply needed her supportive response — and any others I could get. Her words helped enormously. A better response would have been honest acceptance of her kindness and to say, "Thank you. I really appreciate hearing that." Even a simple "thank you" would be enough.


Insensitive receivers tragically discourage generous givers.


Jesus knew how to treat a gift. When a young woman anointed him with expensive ointment, the disciples registered disapproval of the waste. But Jesus gracefully embraced both the gift and the giver, protecting her feelings, and, by his actions, saying, "Thanks, I needed that."


A compliment is a gift. Most of us, if honest about it, are needy enough to take all we can get. Kindness to those who give, and to ourselves, calls for a simple, honest "thank you." Accepting the manna of kindness is, in truth, giving thanks to God.

 
 
 

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