GODLY CONTENTMENT
The following is taken from an old article in the popular daily devotional book “Our Daily Bread”.
Contentment is never the result of multiplying riches, increasing pleasures, or gaining fame. All these only incite discontent, for when one obtains them, he finds he still is not satisfied. Contentment does not depend upon things on the outside, but results from conditions on the inside! Paul had suffered more for the sake of Christ than probably anyone else ( 2 Cor. 11:23-28); yet this is the man who says, “I am content.” The apostle was able to interpret all the experiences of life in terms of God’s will for his eternal good ( Rom. 8:28). Paul did not come to this happy philosophy of life in a moment. He says, “I have learned … to be content.” Aspiring to be what we are not, or grasping after riches which elude us, is not the way to happiness. We must rather do our very best with God’s help to accomplish our life’s task with the talents and opportunities He presents.
In his famous lecture on “Clocks and Watches,” Dr. Joseph Parker related the following story: A little watch, delicately strung, was dissatisfied with its restricted sphere of influence in a lady’s pocket. It envied the position of Big Ben, the great tower clock. One day as it passed with her ladyship over London’s Westminster Bridge, the tiny watch exclaimed, “I wish I could go up there! I could then serve multitudes, instead of just one individual.” “You shall have your opportunity, small watch,” she said. The lecturer then dramatically described how the pocket timepiece was drawn up the side of the mammoth tower by a slender thread. When it reached the top, it was completely lost to view. In his dramatic way, Dr. Parker concluded his lecture by exclaiming, “Its elevation had become its annihilation!”
Pray that you too may not lose the small influence you now have for Christ by coveting something larger for which you are not equipped, and which God constantly refuses you in His love.
O for the peace of perfect trust
My loving God in Thee;
Unwavering faith that never doubts
Thou choosest best for me. —Anon.
Discontent makes rich men poor,
While contentment makes poor men rich
David Stone
Lakeway Baptist Church
5801 FM 1960 E
Humble, TX. 77346
