Today's meditation: What will we give in return to the Lord for all he gives us?

What language could give God's gifts due prominence? Their number is in fact so large that it can escape any list. Their size, then, is such and so great that only one of them should stimulate us to thank the donor without end.
But there is a favor that, even if we wanted to, we could in no way pass over in silence. Indeed, it could not be admissible that any person, equipped with a healthy mind and capable of reflection, would not say anything, even if far below duty, of the distinguished divine benefit that we are about to remember.
God created man in his image and likeness. It provided him with intelligence and reason unlike all the other living beings on earth. It gave him the power to delight in the stupendous beauty of earthly paradise. And finally made him sovereign of all things in the world. After the serpent's deception, the fall into sin and, through sin, death and tribulation, he did not abandon the creature to its fate. Instead, he gave her the law to help, protect and guard the angels and sent the prophets to correct vices and teach virtue. With threats of punishment he repressed and eradicated the impetuosity of evil. With promises he stimulated the alacrity of the good. Not infrequently did he show in advance, in this or that person, the final fate of the good or bad life. He was not disinterested in man even when he persistently continued in his disobedience. No, in his goodness the Lord did not abandon us even because of the foolishness and insolence shown by us in despising the honors he had offered us and in trampling on his love as benefactor. Indeed, he called us back from death and returned to new life through our Lord Jesus Christ.
At this point, even the way in which the benefit was made arouses even greater admiration: "Although he was of a divine nature, he did not consider his equality with God a jealous treasure, but he stripped himself, assuming the condition of a servant" (Phil 2, 6-7). Furthermore, he took on our sufferings and took on our pains, for us he was struck because we were healed for his wounds (cf. Is 53: 4-5) and he still redeemed us from the curse, becoming himself for our curse's sake (cf. Gal 3:13), and went to meet an extremely ignominious death to bring us back to a glorious life.
He did not content himself with recalling us from death to life, but rather made us partakers of his own divinity and keeps us prepared for an eternal glory that outweighs any human evaluation.
So what can we do to the Lord for all he has given us? (cf. Ps 115, 12). He is so good that he does not even demand the exchange: he is happy instead that we reciprocate him with our love.
When I think of all this, I remain as terrified and stunned for fear that, due to my lightness of mind or worries from nothing, it will weaken me in the love of God and even become a cause of shame and disdain for Christ.