I know how to live when I am poor, and I
know how to live when I have plenty. I have learned the secret of being happy
at any time in everything that happens, when I have enough to eat and when I go
hungry, when I have more than I need and when I do not have enough.
-- Philippians 4:12
-- Philippians 4:12
The story goes that a reporter once interviewed
a billionaire and marveled at the rich man's ability to amass wealth. "Just how much money is enough?"
the reporter inquired.
"Just a little bit
more,"
replied the billionaire.
Whether you're rich, living from paycheck to
paycheck or somewhere in between, a little bit more always seems to be
the remedy for life's dissatisfactions. Rather than In God We Trust,
perhaps America's national motto should be Supersize It.
God has blessed us with a nation of incredible
wealth. Even our poor and unemployed could be considered rich by the standards
of most of the world. Yet an epidemic of discontentment tends
to blind us to
this fact. The more possessions we gather and the higher we climb on the
corporate ladder, the more disillusioned and unfulfilled we become. And rather
than thanking God for his blessings and making the most of them, we wonder
(often aloud) if this is all there is to life.
This disease of discontentment has some nasty
symptoms. Those afflicted with the malady often turn to alcohol, drugs, illicit
relationships and gambling to ease the self-inflicted pain. Things might get
better for a while. But the hunger returns soon enough.
This problem is hardly new. And it's not
confined to the United States or even Western society. In fact, the Bible
addressed the issues of greed and discontentment centuries ago. And its advice
is as valid today as it was back then:
First, consider how God has blessed you. It
could involve your family, career, health, friends ... just count the ways.
Then, stop trying to compare what you have with your neighbor's possessions.
Advertising agencies prosper when they convince you that the grass is greener
on the other side of the fence. But don't forget that someone else is probably
wishing they could enjoy just one or two of your blessings!
Contentment isn't something that we can get by
buying a new car, moving into a bigger house or landing that job with the
corner office. Rather, it’s an internal source of fulfillment and comfort
acquired by knowing our Savior and living out the abundant life he's purchased
for us.
It's really all about Jesus. A growing
relationship with him renders contentment because there's nothing bigger,
better or more necessary. Comparisons fall away and material things lose their
luster. What was once so important soon fades into obscurity.
Does this sound simplistic or too good to be
true?
A whole new life is just inches away: It's the distance between our head and
our heart. And we’re all free to accept Jesus' grand offer and grow in
contentment.
"Seek first God's kingdom and what God wants," he tells us through Matthew's gospel. "Then all your other needs will be met as well."
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