Leadership Thought: The Grass Isn't Always Greener on the Other Side of the Street.
Dear
Friend,
We have
heard that “the grass is always greener on the other side of the street,” and
that is often true. But as someone once remarked, "so also is the water bill.”
You and I have an awful habit of comparing ourselves and what we have with
those who have more. As a result, we often miss the best God has for
us because we fail to appreciate the blessings we already have.
The apostle
lived what most of us would consider a stressful life, but yet he found the
prescription for his stress. At the close of his message to the Philippian
Church, he writes I have learned the secret of contentment” (Philippians 4:12).
No matter what my circumstances, whether I live under a bridge or in a
penthouse, whether I am rich or poor I have learned to be content.
Unfortunately, in today’s world when we are bombarded by ads of every variety that are always promising comfort and convenience, happiness and contentment, we are tempted to think we will also find that happiness in some product or some service. But these things seldom bring happiness or contentment. Just ask some of the lottery winners whose newfound wealth has brought them nothing but misery and discontentment.
We are too
much like the guy described in the following bit of doggerel:
“As a rule, mans a fool
When it cool, he wants it hot.
And when it’s hot, he wants it cool.
Always wanting what is not.”
Happiness
comes from within and not without. If there is a vacuum within your heart,
Satan will steal in and convince you that happiness is found in a credit card.
However, like cotton candy, our purchases may bring temporary pleasure, but
soon after the purchase we want something newer and bigger, which almost always
means more money. As someone said, “greed has a growling stomach.”
Paul tells
us in Philippians 4:10, “My God will meet all your needs according to his
glorious riches in Christ Jesus.”.
Christ will
meet all of our needs, but never all our greed. God wants the best for us, but
often we miss that best because we fail to recognize the blessings we already
possess.
An ancient
Persian legend tells of a wealthy man by the name of Al Haffed, who owned a
large farm. One evening a visitor related to him tales of fabulous amounts of
diamonds that could be found in other parts of the world, and of the great
riches they could bring him. The vision of all this wealth made him feel poor
by comparison. So instead of caring for his own prosperous farm, he sold it and
went out to find these treasures. But the search proved to be fruitless.
Finally, penniless and in despair, he committed suicide by jumping into the
sea.
Meanwhile,
the man who had purchased his farm noticed one day the glint of an unusual
stone in a shallow stream on the property. He reached into the water and, to
his amazement, he pulled out a huge diamond. Later when working in his garden,
he uncovered many more valuable gems. Poor Al Haffed had spent his life
traveling to distant lands seeking jewels, when on the farm he had left behind
were all the precious stones his heart could have ever desired.
Security
can never be found in a safe deposit box. Jesus has taught us that a man’s life
does not consist in the abundance of his possessions (Luke 12:15), and He
advised his disciples “to lay up treasures for themselves in heaven rather than
on earth” (Mt. 6:19f).
Let us never
forget that contentment never comes from the accumulation of things, but from
the assurance that “God will never leave us or forsake us”, and that’s a
promise we can count on.
Yours in
faith,
Pastor Tom
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