'...I have learned the secret of being content...' Philippians 4:12
Michael Drosnin wrote a book about a man who wanted more wealth, so he built one of the biggest financial empires of his day. He wanted more pleasure, so he paid for the most glamorous women money could buy. He wanted more adventure, so he set air speed records, built and piloted the world's most unique aircraft. He wanted more power, so he acquired political clout that was the envy of senators. He wanted more glamour, so he owned film studios and courted stars.
Drosnin tells how this man's life ended: 'He was a figure of gothic power, ready for the grave. Emaciated, only 120 pounds stretched over his six-foot-four-inch frame...thin scraggly beard that reached its way onto his sunken chest, hideously long fingernails in grotesque yellow corkscrews ...Many of his teeth were black, rotting stumps. A tumour was beginning to emerge from the side of his head...innumerable needle marks...Howard Hughes was an addict. A billionaire junkie.'
So here's the question: If Hughes had pulled off one more deal, made one more million and tasted one more thrill, would it have been enough? The illusion of gratitude is that we will experience it more, if we get more! No, making sure a child gets everything they want destroys their initiative and dulls their sense of gratitude and contentment. Don't you find it interesting that the man who wrote, 'I have learned the secret of being content' also wrote, 'In every thing give thanks: for this is the will of God in Christ Jesus concerning you' (1 Thessalonians 5:18)?
You cannot make yourself a more grateful or contented person, but you can pray for it and open your heart to it.
www.ucb.co.uk/wft
I would like to wish you all a very Happy Easter and a contented heart and mind
1 comment:
I once saw a programme about Howard Hughes, and yes, he was horrendous when he died. I would have thought that some of his aids would have stopped him before he got like that.
I also think that the children today are far too spoilt, they get everything they want and their parents just don't know what to buy them for birthdays and christmas. I think those kids are missing out on so much for there is nothing better than having to save up for something and then when you finally get it, you are overjoyed with it because you've had to wait for it.
I can't see what else they want, but there always seems to be more and more.
Because of this, they are never contented.
I would like to wish you a happy easter David.
Are you doing anything special this year?
I must admit I will be just doing the garden (if the weather will let me) but I will be happy to do that as it needs doing!)
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