When I was learning to play upright bass, I had to sacrifice a lot of things to improve…I was practicing all the time, so that means I gave up my sleep, my personal comfort (like when my fingers started bleeding from practice), sometimes I gave up food  (âcause when youâre really jamming you donât even stop to eat, right?)…
So what I was after in life — becoming a better upright bass player — drove my decisions I was making; my goal motivated me to sacrifice for the greater cause.
Hereâs the thing: we all have deep longings in life, right? Things we know we were made for. Sometimes itâs a goal like improving at a skill or moving up in our job. And sometimes it goes even deeper, like wanting to be married or have children, longing to be healed from a disease, wishing you could spend time with a loved one you lostâŚ.All our desires in this life drive our decisions about how we live in the world.
All it takes is a quick glance over your life to realize all of us have circumstances that make us feel desperate and boxed in, and for many of us our deep longings in life have to do with circumstances we want to see God end, change, or improve in some way.
So let me ask you this — what would you do if your current circumstances never changed?
I know…I say that, and youâre like, âNo, not happening! I canât handle the thought of that!â But letâs be real, sometimes the hard things in life last way longer than we want.
So how do we experience contentment in those types of situations?
Now, I like to define contentment this way: contentment is surrender to exactly what God is doing at the moment. Click To Tweet
Did you catch the timeline on that definition? âIn this momentâŚâ Contentment shows up in our lives in two distinct ways — trust and thankfulness — and both those things are rooted in our present reality.
First, letâs talk about trusting God….We live in a culture with little to no overarching trust or surrender to God, sometimes even in the church! We want to be in the driverâs seat. We want to make the rules.
We get stressed out and anxious when we try to figure out Godâs plan for our futures, which is why contentment is rooted in the present. Now, real faith doesnât depend on us denying our circumstances…Contentment isnât the absence of longing. God can handle our honesty about how painful our circumstances are. But contentment is when you and I trust God enough to say, âLord, this situation is really difficult for me. Would you change it? I trust that youâre good even though this is really hard.â
When we learn to trust Godâs direction for our lives, we become content with what Heâs doing in our lives here and now. Click To Tweet
Next, thankfulness…
When we compare our lots in life to other peopleâs, that comparison robs us of our contentment. So we have to do the opposite of that — we need to intentionally thank God for His gifts and blessings in our lives.
I dare you to try thanking God and not grow in contentment! Itâs practically impossible! Why? Because thankfulness is contagious; once you start down the path of gratitude to God, youâll find it hard to stop noticing His beauty and blessings all over the place.
And in your trust, and in your thankfulness, contentment is born.
And no matter what circumstances you find yourself in (and there are some really hard ones in this life), youâll be able to stand in faith and say, âThis sucks, and I want it to change. But God, no matter what, I know youâre good.â
Can I Trust God?