[Faith-talk] FW: [thefamilyoffaith] Coffee Break - Be Content

Eric Calhoun eric at pmpmail.com
Tue May 17 17:23:55 UTC 2011



Original Message: 
From: "TONY_at_FloridaHealth" <FloridaHealth21 at verizon.net>
To: <thefamilyoffaith at yahoogroups.com>
Subject: [thefamilyoffaith] Coffee Break - Be Content
Date: 
Tue, 17 May 2011 09:26:01 -0400




           
                 


                        "Be Content"
                          
                        "Let your conversation be without covetousness;
and be content with such things as ye have: for he hath said, I will never
leave thee, nor forsake thee."  (Hebrews 13:5)
                          
                        Lately, I have been hearing the word "be content"
from many different sources.  (Therefore, the Lord must be trying to say
something.)  By nature we tend to be anything but content.  We never seem
to have enough or what we have isn't good enough.  We are always wanting
more, more, more, bigger and better.  Relationships are broken because one
spouse becomes discontent in the marriage.  Their spouse no longer
satisfies them so they go looking for someone "new"- younger, prettier,
more understanding, etc.- to fulfill their discontentment.  People have
lost their homes from outrageous debt because they weren't content to have
a home that would meet their need, they wanted a "castle" that was bigger
than they could afford; or they went in debt to buy things that were
unnecessary just because they wanted them or thought they would "fulfill"
their lives. (Just because we want it, doesn't mean we have to have it.)
                          
                        We aren't content to have just what we need, we
want everything, including what we can't have.  You've heard the saying,
"The grass always looks greener on the other side".  Maybe we should
rewrite it to say, "The grass always 'seems' to be greener on the other
side".  Just because it looks greener doesn't mean it is a good thing.  I
heard one person say that it was greener because it was on top of the
sewage line- it was being fertilized by the sewage. 
                          
                        The Apostle Paul said he had learned how to be
content.  We need to learn the same thing.  Contentment has a high value-
"Godliness with contentment is great gain". (1 Timothy 6:6)  But there is
ruin that comes from being discontented.  It will rob you of your peace,
take away your joy, lead you down a path to destruction, and so on.  It
also shows a lack of thankfulness to the Lord for what He has blessed you
with.    
                          
                        Is there anything wrong with wanting something
nicer or better?  No, as long as contentment is still there if you can't
get the "nicer/better".  I said that Paul learned how to be content, let me
read what he said about it (I love how it reads in the Amplified Bible)-
"Not that I am implying that I was in any personal want, for I have learned
how to be content (satisfied to the point where I am not disturbed or
disquieted) in whatever state I am.  I know how to be abased and live
humbly in straitened circumstances, and I know also how to enjoy plenty and
live in abundance. I have learned in any and all circumstances the secret
of facing every situation, whether well-fed or going hungry, having a
sufficiency and enough to spare or going without and being in want.  I have
strength for all things in Christ Who empowers me [I am ready for anything
and equal to anything through Him Who infuses inner strength into me; I am
self-sufficient in Christ's sufficiency]." (Philippians 4:11-13)  
                          
                        Have a great day.  We need to learn how to be
content.
                          
                        For further reading:
                        Matthew 6:20
                        1 Timothy 6:8
                          
                        <><  <><  <><  <><  <><  <><  <><  <><  <><  <>< 
<><  


                        Coffee Break is a morning devotional written by
Lorraine Ezell
                        and is sent to you free of charge for the asking
from
                        About the Master's Business Ministry, Inc.
                        Please feel free to
                        call (601) 833-5278 or
                        Email:   mastersbusiness at bellsouth.net
                         Visit us on the web:   www.mastersbusiness.org


                        You are welcomed to make copies and distribute
them free of charge.
                        You may also forward them via e-mail or post them
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