Expectant Contentment

So here’s what I want you to do, God helping you: Take your everyday, ordinary life—your sleeping, eating, going-to-work, and walking-around life—and place it before God as an offering. Embracing what God does for you is the best thing you can do for him. Don’t become so well-adjusted to your culture that you fit into it without even thinking. Instead, fix your attention on God. You’ll be changed from the inside out. Readily recognize what he wants from you, and quickly respond to it. Unlike the culture around you, always dragging you down to its level of immaturity, God brings the best out of you, develops well-formed maturity in you. (Romans 12:1, 2 MSG)

A while back I wrote about being flummoxed as I was pondering the ways God was working in me and through me. I really didn’t understand all that was unfolding (hence the flummoxed condition) but I think I have settled on a better way of describing it. I am in a state of expectant contentment. Do you see the problem with this statement? Do you see why I am a bit confused? How does someone exist in a both a state of contentment and expectation? A state of having enough but expecting more? How would you feel? Flummoxed?

Let me explain how I exist in this seemingly contradictory condition. The themes of materials I have been reading lately focus on simplifying ones life both in terms of material goods and slowing the pace of life. As I look over my life I think I’m a fairly content person. Alright, the new iPhone 5S will be mine soon, but other than that I am not in want of anything. I have a great job that I enjoy and I think I am pretty good at. I have a wonderful wife who is also my friend. My kids, they are good, sometimes making good choices, sometimes not, but that is what growing up is all about. House, friends, church, good, good, and good. This does not mean that I don’t work on my relationship or the things that I have. It means I am not always looking for bigger, better, or younger house, car/technology, or wife. It also doesn’t mean I have any dreams or ambitions. It means that for right now I am content with what I have and where I am in life. So this is the content side of the equation, but what about the expectant side?

I am expectant in that God will bring into my life changes and challenges that will strengthen my character, challenge my faith, or move me out of my comfort zone. At least that is what I have been sensing over the last few months. One example is a ministry I am involve in at church. I was content being a part of this ministry team serving other. At the end of January, through a series of events I was ask to take over leading this ministry. This change came about because I was listening and responding to God’s prompt in my alone time with God. There are been a number of other little things that have placed me in this condition of expectation. Perhaps I should explain what I mean by expectation. I don’t expect things because they are owed me or because I deserve them. Rather, when I use this work “expectant” I mean that I am actively listening or watching for what God is saying or doing in my life. If I am being transformed daily by the Spirit then I should be watching and listening for what or how these changes are occurring in my life.

For me living a life of expectant contentment is about being satisfied with what I have in the here and now and expecting God to work in me to shape me into who He wants me to be tomorrow or the next day or the next year.


The question for you to think about is “What would your life look like if you were living in a state of expectant contentment?

Your New Life

Verse
Now that you’ve cleaned up your lives by following the truth, love one another as if your lives depended on it. Your new life is not like your old life. Your old birth came from mortal sperm; your new birth comes from God’s living Word. Just think: a life conceived by God himself! That’s why the prophet said, The old life is a grass life, its beauty as short-lived as wildflowers; Grass dries up, flowers droop, God’s Word goes on and on forever. This is the Word that conceived the new life in you. (1 Peter 1:22-25 MSG)

My Word or Phrase
Life conceived by God’s living Word

My Image
The image I see is that of a sunflower turning its head to track the sun. Our new life involves turning our head to track the Son.

My Invitation
My invitation is to live my new life loving one another as I go through my day.


As you meditate on this verse, what are you being invited to do?

World’s Way vs God’s Way

Verse
Don’t love the world’s ways. Don’t love the world’s goods. Love of the world squeezes out love for the Father. Practically everything that goes on in the world—wanting your own way, wanting everything for yourself, wanting to appear important—has nothing to do with the Father. It just isolates you from him. The world and all its wanting, wanting, wanting is on the way out—but whoever does what God wants is set for eternity. (1 John 2:15-17 MSG)

My Word or Phrase
World’s Way vs. God’s Way

My Image
The world’ sway is like being trapped in a sphere. You are free to move around and interact with the things in the sphere but you are unable to interact with all the things that are outside the sphere. God’s way is the vastness of things outside the sphere.

My Invitation
My invitation is to not limit or confine myself to the world’s ways (being trapped in the sphere) rather I need to be engaged in the plans and blessings God has for me not only working inside the sphere but wandering the vastness of His space outside the sphere.


The question to ask is “Where are you today?”