The Building with the Golden Windows

Contentment is one of those subjects that is easy to talk about but hard to master. Let’s say that my neighbor buys himself a brand new Corvette. The car is “please notice me” red. The interior is “please don’t get me dirty” white. The engine is the factory option “you can’t unrun me” high performance. The wheels are “you can’t afford me” aluminum. And to top it all off, he starts wearing a shirt that reads: “Real men drive Corvettes.” Well, how long do you think it will take me to become discontented with my “it’s all I’ve got” Subaru?

I want you to take a personal survey. Ask yourself this question: “Is there anything in my life right now with which I am not content?” Perhaps it’s your car. Perhaps it’s your home. Maybe it’s your job. Maybe it’s your financial situation. It might be your appearance. It might be your relationship status. But is there something that is currently killing your contentment?

As I was growing up, my dad would often say to me, “Russell, you can’t be satisfied with anything.” I remember how I always chafed at that accusation because I honestly didn’t believe that it was true. I used to think to myself, “No, he’s wrong. I can be content, just not with what I’ve got to work with right now.”

Unfortunately, as I’ve grown older, I’ve been forced to learn that my father was right about my contentment level. If that level was a thermostat it would be set very, very low. I’ll now freely admit that it doesn’t take much to get me to looking over the hills and thinking, “How much better my life would be if I was over there.” Seriously, if God had let me move every time I had felt an urge to do so, my primary vehicle would have become a U-HAUL long ago. As for Tonya and the boys, I guess they would have felt like a military family that moves from one base to another, never staying anywhere long enough to put down roots and build lasting relationships.

Somewhere, years ago, I read a silly little line that has always helped me. It goes like this: “If the grass is greener on the other side of the fence, it’s because it’s growing over a septic tank.” That line has often come to my mind when God has turned down my latest urge to bolt and run and seek my fortune elsewhere. Have I usually got problems in my current location? Yes. But would I be problem free if I moved to that latest place that has caught my fancy? Nope. It would just be a new set of problems, perhaps even worse than my current ones.

You can learn some things by watching children’s television shows. I can’t remember if I was babysitting Ryan or Royce, but one of them was watching a kids’ show one day when a thought-provoking cartoon segment aired. It was about a little girl who lived in an apartment building in a big city. Every morning she would look out her window and stare longingly at the building with the golden windows that sat on the other side of the city. Oh, how she wanted to live in that beautiful building!

So, one morning she made up her mind to go and see the building up close. She got herself dressed and headed out to find it, and all day long she searched and searched but was unable to find the building with the golden windows. Then, late in the afternoon, just as she was about to lose all hope, she turned around and saw the building. But it was way over on the other side of town. She then ran and ran and ran until she finally arrived at the building. That was when she realized that it was the building in which lived. She thought, “How is this possible?” After pondering the situation for a while, the answer came to her: The sun which cast its light upon the one building in rising in the morning was casting its light upon her building in setting in the evening.

Okay, so why am I telling you all this? I’m doing it to help you realize that where you are right now is a wonderful place if it is where God wants to be. That doesn’t mean that God never relocates people. Sometimes He does. But right now, if He has you living in a certain place, working a certain job, maintaining a certain financial level, driving a certain car, etc., you need to learn to see the golden windows in those things. They really are there. You just have to recognize them.

I’ll leave you now with some words from the apostle Paul. They are words that I know very well because they have haunted me many times. The haunting stems from the fact that I still can’t truthfully make the statement that Paul makes. In Philippians 4:11, he says:

…I have learned in whatever state I am, to be content. (N.K.J.V.)

I can’t speak for you, but I haven’t completely learned that yet. No, my classes are still in session. I’m hoping, though, that I can earn that degree one day. But until then, I need to keep looking for those golden windows of where God has me.

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4 Responses to The Building with the Golden Windows

  1. Myron's avatar Myron says:

    Pastor, you’re preaching to the choir! After almost a year, I cannot deny that God moved us here, and I’ve been unhappy about it – discontent – the whole time. And I feel guilty about it. And I, too, have been troubled by Philippians 4:11; but a friend reminded me of Philippians 4:6-7 “Be anxious about nothing, but in everything by prayer and supplication, with thanksgiving, make your requests be made known to God. And the peace of God, the peace that passes understanding, will guard your hearts and minds in Christ Jesus.”
    And God has shown me HE DOES answer prayer.
    Now I don’t pray “Get me outta here!” but rather “increase my faith, and teach me to be content” and “Create in me a clean heart, and renew a right spirit within me.”
    Jehova Jireh.

  2. Malcolm Woody's avatar Malcolm Woody says:

    Psalm 23:1… The LORD is my shepherd; I shall not want… I have not graduated from the great class of contentment either, and my work career and responsibility is based on an idea of continuous improvement – which continuously requires me to look at everything with a certain level of discontent…I’m pretty good at that…lol. I’ve always been stopped dead in my tracks by the opening salvo from David’s great Psalm #23… most gloss over the impact of this first verse to get to what many claim is the good stuff. David says, “The LORD is my shepherd.” That’s everything, right? He could have stopped, but we’d have nothing to recite at funerals… that first verse then is about life not death. Why should I have no want? Because the Creator of the universe and all that is or will ever be is my shepherd. I’m a pretty dumb sheep, thank you LORD for herding me.

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