Showing posts with label Contentment. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Contentment. Show all posts

Monday, 22 August 2016

The Geography Of Real Happiness

Have you ever noticed that happiness does not necessarily relate to where one lives? We live in a mobile age. There are no boundaries to the possibilities of change in environment and circumstance for twenty-first century man. People move more freely and easily across international borders and around the world than previous generations moved to other villages or neighbourhoods.

If you summed it all up you would find that many are moving to and fro on the face of the earth seeking the elusive phantom of their vision of happiness. Free men seek the guarantee of life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness, as a basic bulwark of their freedom. But this guarantee does not necessarily justify the inordinate amount of time some seem to spend in a seemingly futile pursuit of that magic happiness that always seems just around the next bend in life’s road or over the crest of the next mountain of life’s struggle.

Those in the north move south and those in the south move north. Westerners tend to drift east and Easterners go west. Country people seek economic prosperity in the city as the urban dweller is drawn by the lure of what seems to be the simpler life promoted by the back to nature and back to your roots movements. All evidently feel that geographical, social or vocational relocation may finally place them in real contact with that mythical and ever elusive condition of true happiness.

Sad to say, the vast majority are often bitterly disappointed when they inevitably discover the truth that true happiness cannot be acquired in this manner. They realize as well that you cannot move away from your troubles. That old song about packing up your troubles in your old kit bag says it all. The baggage of one’s troubles always seems to be on the same plane or following along on a flight close behind.

In our day of easy divorce and government subsidized marriage breakdown, it is amazing how many people seem to think they can move on to a new relationship without the baggage of broken and failed relationships and all the emotional immaturity and instability involved in such unresolved conflict, following close behind them!

No, happiness does not necessarily relate to where one lives, what one does for a living or how much of this world’s goods one might accumulate. It is more a matter of why, how and with whom one lives. Those who find true happiness are pleasantly surprised to find that the abundant life is as mobile and universal as the person and presence of the Lord Jesus Christ.

He said one purpose of His coming and His eternal existence is that our joy might be full. He did not speak of true happiness being found in the absence of trials, troubles and tribulations, but in the midst of them. He did not speak of happiness being characterized by the absence of the winds of adversity, but of His joy and peace being possible in the storms of life.

Joseph and Daniel found a life of true joy, happiness, fulfilment and the will of God, in the unlikely geography of a land of their captivity. We also need to truly understand that happiness is to know the Saviour and live a life within His favour. As an old children’s chorus said it, happiness is the Lord.

When all is said and done it must be admitted that one primary source of discontent and unhappiness in our lives may come from allowing the world to set our standards and priorities and define the condition of happiness for us. If we value those things the Lord values and seek first His Kingdom, His Peace, Joy and true happiness will be our real reward.

Monday, 15 August 2016

Facing The Future Without Fear

We live in terrible times. The threat of cruel barbaric terrorism pervades the atmosphere at home and abroad. Hardly a day passes without hearing news of another unimaginable atrocity perpetrated upon innocent women and children. It seems there is no depths of depravity those who are the adversaries of freedom and truth will not plumb in order to bring terror and fear to those who advocate and advance the principles of a Judeo-Christian civilization.

They make it clear they hate us for being us. They tell us in no uncertain terms we do not deserve to live on the same planet with them. They say ultimately we must convert to their religion or die at the point of a sword. It seems they would prefer the latter fate.

We seem to be given the options of dying on our feet resisting their tyrannical brutality or living on our knees in slavish subjection to an extreme and perverted form of a religion. They make no secret of their ultimate goal. They seek to impose their barbaric, uncivilized code upon all the world.

Is there any hope? Surely God will answer the prayers of those who will stand for righteousness in the land and in the world and grant the continuing freedom we need to live and serve Him. Surely we are still privileged to pray for such a victory in our time. Surely we can use the weapons of spiritual warfare He has given us to face our fears of the forces arrayed against us and forge ahead into a future of real freedom in Christ Jesus!

In Christ we can always be optimistic about the future. We can be sure the sun will rise tomorrow and the future will come, if Jesus does not come in the meantime, and then that will be our future! Tomorrow may bring its own share of troubles and trials, but it will bring along with those the overruling providence of our great God. The words of our Saviour assure us of this, "... In the world ye shall have tribulations: but be of good cheer; I have overcome the world." (John 16:33) Our Saviour is saying the obvious, if we will just stop and consider it. Each day has enough burdens and blessings of its own.

God only gives us grace and strength to live one day at a time. That's all we really need. Tomorrow's problems and challenges can be dealt with by His grace if and when tomorrow comes. Prudent planning and provision for tomorrow is wise, but undue worry about tomorrow is foolish and futile and fails to face the future with faith that the God of today is also the God of tomorrow. 
The scriptures tells us that Jesus is the same yesterday, today and tomorrow and that God's mercies are new each morning. When we are too fretful and fearful about tomorrow, we often rob ourselves of the peace, joy and victory God would give us today. This is not God's will and way for us. Our outlook about the future should be reflected in the words of the Psalmist, "This [is] the day [which] the LORD hath made; we will rejoice and be glad in it." (Psalm 118:24)

But is our God really able to help us today? Do we have any rivers that are "uncrossable"? Do we have any mountains that are unclimable? Do we have any walls that are unbreachable? Do we have any fiery furnaces whose flames are unquenchable? Do we face any lions whose mouths are unstoppable? Do we have any problems that seem insoluble? Do we have any foes who are unconquerable? Do we have any hurts that seem unhealable? Surely the great God of Abraham, Issac and Jacob can come to our aid today, if only we trust in Him!

Friday, 24 June 2016

Can We Be Content?

Could God's statement, "Godliness with contentment is great gain," have been written for our day and  time? If there has ever been a statement of principle that runs counter to the world's philosophy today, this is it. In our dog eat dog culture the secret to the success many advocate seems to be an unholy discontent. The way to get ahead is by hook or crook. Anything goes as long as it advances one's drive to gain power, popularity and material prosperity.  

In our no holds barred culture, the end does often seem to always justify the means. The rungs of the ladder to the top are comprised of the backs of the less ambitious and less ruthless. Honesty and fair dealing are qualities to be sneered at and pitied in those weaklings who stumble along in an un-enlightened world of principle and integrity.  It seems that success has been defined in the terms of materialism. That the more things a person accumulates the more contentment and happiness will bless his days. Excessive acquisition seems to be the name of the game. Success has somehow become synonymous with selfishness and is symbolized by covetousness. slogans such as "He who dies with the most toys wins." These seem to epitomize the foundation principles of such a culture. All this in spite of the fact that everyone knows that even the richest and most opulent fortunes are left behind when man meets his Maker in judgment. No one takes such seeming success to the scene that's seen beyond the shedding of the shell of this mortal vale. How much does he leave? He leaves it all. After all, have you ever seen a hearse pulling a trailer?  

Could it be that our culture's redefinition of success and the basis of real contentment is a prime factor in the overwhelming increase of moral pollution and social ills we see all around us? Could it be that the tremendous increase of such indicators of .discontent as the so-called sex revolution, drug culture and the terrible youth suicide rate, can be attributed to a great degree to the false concept that contentment can only be found in fleeting popularity and material prosperity?  The greatest challenge in the Christian's life today is to live in opposition to this philosophy. To reject the crass materialism that underlies it. To simply live in Godly contentment. To live in the light of the selfless cross rather than the shadow of the selfish floss and froth of our materialistic world today. To be able to say with Paul, "I have learned in whatsoever state I am, therewith to be content."  

Dr. Paul Goodwin in his monograph, "Learning To Be Content," had this to say: "Paul writes of the best of all states, the state of contentment.... He had learned a heart lesson at the feet of Jesus and in the school of experience. Contentment is not found in a place or circumstance nor in a change of places or circumstances. Contentment is of the spirit. It comes from within and not from without. A contented spirit is like a watch which is moved up and down and around but is not disturbed on the inside. Rather it keeps on telling the correct time.”  

The Christian can expect change. We live in a changing world, but we should not live under the changing circumstances. The word translated "content" means to be master of the situation, to be victor, conqueror of the circumstances. Paul lived contentedly in changing and contrasting circumstances. Contentment is one of life's greatest victories. Contentment is not a natural disposition. Paul stated he learned to be content. To be content requires effort and much discipline on the part of the one who wills to be content. We can learn a lesson from nature. Weeds, sometimes undesirable, will grow without cultivation, but flowers require cultivation. Contentment is worth cultivating. One does not get up some morning with a superb education. An education requires effort, intense application and concentration. Likewise, contentment does not suddenly appear in a mysterious and magical way. One does not go to bed complaining and wake up the next morning in a holy state of contentment. Paul learned to be content by working on his discontent. If we are ever to be content, we too will learn to be content.   
Pastor John White