“Not that I speak in
respect of want: for I have learned, in whatsoever state I am, therewith to be
content. I know both how to be abased, and I know how to abound: every where
and in all things I am instructed both to be full and to be hungry, both to
abound and to suffer need. I can do all things through Christ which
strengtheneth me.” Philippians 4:11-13
Our attitude and our state of mind have a great effect on our
health. Our attitude towards ourselves, our attitude toward life, our
relationships with other people have a powerful effect on our physical life as
well as our emotional life. Fear, resentment, anxieties, a lack of purpose in
life can be just as detrimental to our health.
We must remember that Paul was in prison when he wrote this
epistle. He was probably chained to a guard on either side of him 24 hours a
day. And it was in this setting that he says, “I have learned to be
content.”
To understand what contentment is, it’s easier to understand by
seeing what discontentment is. Every time we complain, every time we grumble,
every time we express our envy and our jealousy, we’re expressing
discontentment. Discontentment is when you are unhappy with your present
circumstances when you have an uneasy state of mind because of the things that
are happening in your life.
Is contentment being happy with
everything? Is contentment saying, “I’m happy about what’s happening in my
life”? Is contentment liking my present circumstances? Not necessarily. That’s
not exactly what Paul was talking about in this scripture. Contentment is not
being stoic. To control your mind that suffering and pain no longer come to
your consciousness. The Eastern mystics, can sleep on a bed of nails, or can
walk over a bed of hot coals and feel nothing; they have so suppressed their
thought process about it. Paul is not telling us to be numb to suffering.
Nor do we have to learn to like everything that’s happening in
our lives. I don’t think Paul liked being in prison. We are not expected to
look at our burdens or our difficulties or our problems and say, “I like this.”
There are those who say, “You have to praise God for all things.” I don’t think
Paul is saying that.
Nor is he telling us that we must settle for those things in our
lives that are less than they ought to be. Paul had a lot of incompleteness and
a lot of imperfections in his life, he was not saying, “Well, I’m just going to
settle for that.” There were things in his life to which Paul expressed a great
deal of discontentment. He said, “I press on; I have not yet achieved.”
Contentment is knowing that you have all you need for the
present circumstances. In verse 11, Paul did not say he liked being hungry. I
like being in want. I like being in difficult circumstances.” He does not say
that at all. What he is saying is that “Though I may not like it, I know I have
from God what it’s going to take to measure up to these present
circumstances. “I can cope with it”. “I can handle it.”
Nothing upsets me more quickly than when my computer doesn’t
work. I can be patient with a lot of things. If the few things that I know
don’t fix the problem then I don’t have the foggiest idea of what to do.
Therefore, when my computer won’t work, I am extremely discontented. But, why am
I discontented? I am discontented because I don’t know what to do to fix the
problem. I don’t know how to deal with the situation. I can’t cope with
it.
But, if someone was to come to me with something I know how to
do, I have a great deal of contentment then, because I’m confident I can handle
it. In one situation, I can cope with it; in the other situation, I can’t. In
one situation I measure up to it, I know what to do and in the other situation,
I’m lost. I don’t know what to do.
Contentment is taking your present situation, whatever
obstacle you are facing, whatever limitation you are living with, whatever
chronic condition wears you down, whatever has smashed your dreams, whatever
factors and circumstances in life tend to push you under, and saying in the
middle of it, “I don’t like it,” but never saying, “I can’t cope with it.” The
Word of God says: “I can do all things through Christ who straightens
me.”
II Cor. 4:7-9: “But we have this treasure in earthen
vessels, that the excellency of the power may be of God, and not of us. We are
troubled on every side, yet not distressed; we are perplexed, but not in
despair; Persecuted, but not forsaken; cast down, but not destroyed.” You
may feel distress, but you may never feel despair. You may feel pressed down,
but you may never feel defeated. There are unlimited resources available to us
in God. But, as soon as you say “I can’t cope,” you are failing to draw on
these unlimited resources. Contentment is being confident you measure up to any
test you are facing because of the resources of strength that Christ has made
available to you, that’s contentment.
How can we achieve contentment? It doesn’t come
naturally. The apostle Paul tells us that it has to be learned. “I have learned
to be content.” Life is a school. It is a classroom. I’ve had to wrestle hard
and it is only through the long process of living and wrestling with
difficulties in life that I have come to the point of realizing I am content.
It is a process, and I practice it all my days. The biggest reason why God
allows these difficulties to come into our lives is because it’s through the
process of wrestling with them down in the valley that we learn what this kind
of contentment is all about.
I have discovered in my 51 years in the pastorship that most
people live the greater part of their lives in the valley. But, do you know
what great truth I discover? “That the God of the mountains is also the God of
the Valleys! (I Kings 20:22-29) Draw close to God. Get as
close to Him as you possibly can. And you will find that it is in drawing close
to Him that all His strength will be made available to you. No matter what the
valley, no matter how deep it is, you can make the best of it. And you can grow
through it.
If everything else changes, Yet the Lord does not change. If the
sources of all other joy are dried up, God’s joy is never-ending. The Bible
tells us in Nehemiah 8:10 “for the joy of the LORD is your
strength”. When you come to the Lord in sincere faith you will find
joy, strength, and most of all hope that things will get better. Hope is the
desire for something good with the anticipation of receiving it. If God has
placed a hope in your heart, don’t give it up, and don’t surrender it, no
matter what your circumstances might be.
Many people live without hope for the future. Somehow they
cannot believe that God loves them and has a purpose for their life. It does
not matter what pain or impossible circumstances you may be facing, God will
replace your despair with a great sense of hope. One common mistake that many
people make is to measure God’s love for them by their circumstances.
You will make mistakes, but He will take your failures every
time and turn them into something good for you. Why? Because He is a God who
knows exactly what you need, He knows when you need it and He will be there to
provide it.
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