Thank you for this very thoughtful post, NotMyOwn.
One of the greatest blessings I was ever given was a Godly (adoptive) father, and I try to make it a point to tell him (and my mom, who also adopted me) regularly how thankful I am for them and efforts and sacrifices they made to send me to Lutheran schools, regular church services and events, etc.
For as many conflicts as I've had while coming to terms with what I was reading in the Bible vs. what I was seeing carried out there, I know my parents and many of the people there worked hard to make sure I had a solid Biblical foundation, and I will always be grateful for that.
In my adult years, I've wrote a letter of gratitude to pastor there who was especially influential during my formative years, patiently trying to answer my endless streams of questions and caring for my classmates and myself as a spiritual father.
As you said, I think it's vitally important to let people know how important to their work has been in our lives and to reinforce their God-given abilities (a big part of the edification God tells us to give others.)
it is very important for all of us as God's children to afford dignity and respect to everyone we meet, as they're made in God's image. it's important to say thank you, as you do.
hope i didn't sound like men are in some way superior to women. they aren't, just as we're not superior to them. we're just
different.
i was intrigued by this thread for a couple of reasons. as you know, one of our daughters works with the victims of domestic violence. like most things, it's a really complex issue, but it sure wouldn't hurt to treat everyone, from the newborn to the oldies, with value. if folks understood their inherent value as a human being, AND the value of every other person, would there be a little less DV?
my parents had 4 daughters in the 1950s and very early 1960s. dad never implied he wished at least one of us had been a son, or ever made us feel 'less-than' because we're girls. i love being a girl! wouldn't trade for anything.
he also never made us feel we were "one of the guys". he and mom gave us to understand we're competent, intelligent, capable people.
maybe that's one reason it distresses me to see the way men actually
are berated for being masculine by some of the noisier segments of the culture. i have nothing to prove.
so, yeah, women are cool and important, too! but that's not why you began this thread.
now i'm going to spend some time thanking God for the parents He gave me to, and maybe group text my sisters.