I know what it is to be in need, and I know
what it is to have plenty. I have learned the secret of being content in any
and every situation, whether well fed or hungry, whether living in plenty or in
want. I can do everything through him who gives me strength. Philippians
4:12-13
The founder of a large newspaper used to put the
following statement on his editorial page: "There is no hope for the
satisfied man." He was right, for most of the achievements of the past
century have come because someone was dissatisfied, not willing to accept
things as they were. Someone believed that things could be better. Almost all
of the achievements of medicine, science, literature, and the arts have come
because people were dissatisfied with the status quo.
Satisfaction is the enemy of progress, but notice that
being dissatisfied and being discontented are two entirely different matters.
Most of the time we think of a person who is discontented with something as
being dissatisfied, but that is not necessarily true. You can be dissatisfied
with things as they are and try to improve them while you are still content and
at peace with yourself and God in an imperfect world.
Is it possible? I believe that it is. Let me show you
how. Paul, the writer of 13 New Testament books, and the one to whom we owe a
great debt spiritually, was one of the history's most dissatisfied individuals,
yet he had an emotional and spiritual equilibrium that kept him from breaking
under the stress and pressures of life. Anyone who studies his life will agree
that Paul was often a dissatisfied person. In his letter to the church at
Philippi he said, literally, "Look, I have not arrived; I am not perfect,
but I am going to do this very thing, namely, forgetting the things that are
past, I'm going to press on towards my goal which is in Christ Jesus." He
was also dissatisfied with his personal life--he constantly wanted to do
better. He often felt that his best wasn't good enough.
In his letter to the Philippians he tells of the things
that he could boast of-- his family background, his educational achievements,
his prestige in the world, his intellect, yet he says, "Every advantage
that I have gained, I consider loss for the sake of Christ." His
dissatisfaction with himself and the world around him motivated him to press
on, to do more, to take one more trip. But the big question is: "In a less
than perfect world, is it possible to be content?" Paul says it is.
In the same letter that he spoke of his dissatisfaction,
he said, "I have learned to be content whatever the circumstances may be.
I know now how to live when things are difficult and I know how to live when
things are prosperous. In general and in particular I have learned the secret
of facing either poverty or plenty." From the standpoint of logic,
dissatisfaction and contentment just do not go together.
Paul himself tells us how to cope. In the very next
sentence Paul said, "I am ready for anything through the strength of the
One who lives within me." There it is: discontent with negative
circumstance, yet content in the circumstances because of the indwelling
presence of Jesus Christ. Paul spoke of this secret--if we could call it
that--when he wrote to the Galatians, "I live, yet not I but Christ lives
in me, and the life which I now live, I live by the faith of the Son of God who
loves me and gave Himself for me" (Galatians 2:20-21).
Two prepositions make the difference--with and in. When
bad things happen, you are unhappy with the circumstances--the people who
disappoint you, the tough breaks and disappointments, yet you can be content in
times of distress and difficulty, knowing that your faith reaches beyond your
disappointment, and that you see beyond the heartache which causes headaches
and nervous breakdowns. This was Paul's secret; it can be yours as well.
Source: Dr. Harold J. Sala
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