Unlikely Contentment

When I first started blogging, one of my main focuses was on “being content.” Perhaps it was the season in my life, but I found that people around me, as a general rule, struggled with accepting the life that God had given them – and even more so – rejoicing in the life God had given them. Contentedness is not something that comes easy in a culture that tells us that we constantly need more stuff, more relationships, and more, more, more. Yet while it’s easy to blame the absence of contentedness on society, the truth is that the real culprit lies in the human heart. We aren’t discontent because a marketing message tells us we shouldn’t be (although it’s possible for that to fuel it); there’s another reason. If we aren’t God’s children, we aren’t content because we don’t have Him. If we are His kids, and we aren’t content, it’s because we don’t appreciate that because we have Him, there is nothing else that we need.

The ironic thing is that it’s hard to tell whether you find your contenedness in God until it’s tested. When things that you relied on or people that you counted on are taken away, you begin to understand whether contendness is found in them or in God. When dreams are shattered, when plans don’t work out as you intended, and when the future seems completely uncertain, and you are still hopefully confident because you know that God is on  your side, that’s true contentment. Contentment is easy when things are as expected; it’s harder when life has ceased to be predictable.

Yet we can see from Scripture that contentment in Christ can cause unlikely things to bring fulfillment. In 2 Corinthians 12:10, Paul writes:

For the sake of Christ, then, I am content with weaknesses, insults, hardships, persecutions, and calamities. For when I am weak, then I am strong.

Dictionary.com says that being content means “satisfied with what one is or has; not wanting more or anything else. ” So Paul not only accepted his weakness, his trials, and his persecutions, he was satisfied with them. He didn’t want anything else than what God had allowed in his life. And if God had allowed these things, he would be satisfied with them, because he knew that through them, God was doing a work.

In the midst of the hard times, it is difficult to see how God is working. We don’t understand the reason for the challenges, the heartache and the pain. In our minds, there is a much easier path to get to where we are going. And perhaps there is. But God is doing something with the path that we’re on. If, for His sake, we are willing to be satisfied with the things He has allowed in our life, we can expect that He will do great things with them. And that’s a reason to be content.

 

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Volunteered

In my life, I’ve had the opportunity to work with a lot of volunteers. What repeatedly strikes me as odd, is how unhappy many volunteers seem. After all, presumably they are choosing to do whatever work in which they are engaged; what’s the purpose in complaining, when they simply can choose not to do it anymore?

Of course, on a grander scale complaints are not limited to volunteer work. They are many who refuse to follow God simply because of the list of complaints they have against Him. Chief on that list is usually that bad things happen to “good” people. “Why,” the argument goes, “should I follow a God who lets evil rain on the good?”

However, as R.C. Sproul, Jr. reminds us, “that only happened once, and He volunteered.” In other words, the only time that a truly good Person experienced evil was when His Son voluntarily went to the cross to die for our sins and rise again in order to conquer death (I. Cor. 15:3). There is no reason that God the Son “had to” provide this path of redemption, but He choose to because of “His great love for us.” He did it without complaining and without regard for His own personal comfort. He did it voluntarily – because of us.

This should cause us to realize that the question isn’t “why does God let bad things happen to evil people?” but “why does God let any good happen to evil people?” Until we are His children, we are in complete rebellion against Him. Yet God, in His mercy, “send[s] the rain on the just and the unjust” (Mt. 5:45). We experience what philosophers call His “common grace,” even though what we deserve is His abject wrath.

So when we do experience evil as a result of this sinful world in which we live, may we be mindful of the great sacrifice that our Lord willingly made for us. May this cause us to thank God for all the good that we are experiencing and to be content in Him even when we might think we have “reason” to complain.

 

How does the fact that Christ voluntarily went to the cross for us change our perspective when we experience bad things?

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