As fallen men, even redeemed fallen men, we will never be entirely
content in this life. Our hearts are too prone to wander, far too apt to
flirt with idolatry, for us to be completely content in Christ. As
Calvin famously put it, the human heart manufactures idols day and night
every day. Still, we pray for contentment and, like Paul in Philippians
4:11, we seek to learn the secret to contentment in Christ.
If we are content in Christ, what shape will our lives begin to take?
What is the contented heart drawn to? When my contentment is in Christ,
then four things ought to be true of me.
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I will exhibit a deeper love for God’s Word. Because
my contentment is in Him, I will want to know Him more. We know Him more
through His Word. Contentment is a plant that must be tended daily, as
Spurgeon said in his inimitable style: “Now, contentment is one of the
flowers of heaven, and if we would have it, it must be cultivated. It
will not grow in us by nature; it is the new nature alone that can
produce it, and even then we must be specially careful and watchful that
we maintain and cultivate the grace which God has sown in it.” One of
the primary means is by hiding His Word in our hearts and having it on
our person as a constant reminder that apart from our Lord, we can do
nothing.
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I will exhibit a deeper and more mature love for God’s church.
When your satisfaction is found in Christ, then you will want to be in
His church and with His people. It will also transform the way you see
the church. This building is not the church; you are. And when your
contentment is in Christ, you will love God’s people, all of God’s
people, not just those people with whom you are comfortable. And you
will love His church, even though it is imperfect and stained with sin.
If I am content in Christ, then it will set me free from false
expectations in others and will set me free to love people who come from
a different background than do I.
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I will not fall apart when adversity comes. I will
rest in the absolute sovereignty of God and in His prerogative. You and I
have a very limited ability to exegete our circumstances. Because we
are weak and lack omniscience (though we crave it), there will be many
moments in life when we simply do not understand what is going on. We
will face moments when the God whom Scripture calls good brings or
allows things into our lives that will not seem good. They may even seem
very bad: The doctor said it was cancer. Stage four. The boss said my
position has been cut. Your son continues to reject the God I taught him
to love. ISIS beheaded another Christian. Your daughter admits same-sex
attraction. There will be times when all you have is Christ, but if you
are content in Him, He will be enough. When we our content in Christ,
we can say with Paul, in Phil. 3:7–8, “But
whatever gain I had, I counted loss for the sake of Christ. Indeed, I
count everything as loss for because of the surpassing worth of knowing
Christ Jesus my Lord. For his sake, I have suffered the loss of all
things and count them as rubbish, in order that I may gain Christ.”
When it pleases the Lord to take away some earthly blessing I cherish,
then I should be able to say with Job, “The Lord gives and the Lord
takes away, blessed be the name of the Lord.”
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I will want others to know the great gain that comes from godliness with contentment.
I will want my friends, neighbors and family members to find the peace
that passes understanding. Thus, I will not be embarrassed to proclaim
to them the only path that leads to the Celestial City.
I have written this series, not because I am always content or am an
expert in the doctrine of contentment. Actually, I have written this
because I am an expert in discontentment and am seeking contentment in
Christ. May it please God to grant it. So far, I must say, it comes and
goes. I have to repent much of discontentment.
I close out this brief series with memorable words from Spurgeon on the absurdity of discontentment for the follower of Christ:
“Permit me to remind you again, that you should be contented, because
otherwise you will belie your own prayers. You kneel down in the
morning, and you say, “Thy will be done!” Suppose you get up and want
your own will, and rebel against the dispensation of your heavenly
Father, have you not made yourself out to be a hypocrite? The language
of your prayer is at variance with the feeling of your heart. Let it
always be sufficient for you to think that you are where God put you.
Have you not heard the story of the heroic boy on board the burning
ship? When his father told him to stand in a certain part of the vessel,
he would not move till his father bade him, but stood still when the
ship was on fire. Though warned of his danger he held his ground. Until
his father told him to move, there would he stay. The ship was blown up,
and he perished in his fidelity. And shall a child be more faithful to
an earthly parent than we are to our Father, who is in heaven? He has
ordered everything for our good, and can he be forgetful of us? Let us
believe that whatever he appoints is best; let us choose rather his will
than our own. If there were two places, one a place of poverty, and
another a place of riches and honour, if I could have my choice, it
should be my privilege to say, ‘Nevertheless, not as I will, but as thou
wilt.’” (Spurgeon’s entire sermon from Phil. 4:11 simply titled “Contentment” is available here.)
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