“I’m not saying this because I need anything, for I have learned how to be content in any circumstance. I know the experience of being in need and of having more than enough; I have learned the secret to being content in any and every circumstance, whether full or hungry or whether having plenty or being poor. I can endure all these things through the power of the one who gives me strength.”
Philippians 4:11-13 (Common English Bible)
Have you noticed how many people have delayed their
happiness? They seem to believe that if they can achieve a little more success,
acquire a little more wealth, or marry the right person then they will possess
happiness. Happiness, they believe, is what follows effort, and time, and,
perhaps, a little luck. It is as though happiness is somewhere out in front of
everyone who is industrious enough to pursue it. Happiness is something to
grasp, they believe, and their minds remain fixed upon it until they have taken
ownership of it. Striving day upon day toward the possession of happiness, what
they miss is that the secret of happiness is already present in the lives of
those who long for it.
Paul’s letter to the Philippian Church provides the
secret of happiness – as God’s people, we are to live in humility, looking out
for others more than for ourselves. That is a great reversal of the commonly
accepted formula for happiness. Essentially, Paul teaches that if we are always
chasing after happiness, happiness always remains beyond our grasp. On the
other hand, if we occupy ourselves with looking out for others, adding value to
other people and promoting their welfare, happiness quietly joins God’s people
and takes-up residence in them. Paul is urging God’s people to break free of
the tiny little world of themselves and join the great enterprise of God’s work
in the world.
Here, in the fourth chapter of Paul’s letter to the
Philippian Church, Paul further develops the secret to happiness. Having shared
the secret of happiness, disclosed in the activity of Jesus who accepted
humility to become like us, for the purposes of restoring us to God, Paul
points to a mysterious strength that converges in our service to one another.
That strength comes not from any person – or from the community of God’s people
– but from the outside. It is God’s strength. There is far more going on when
God’s people join with one another for the promotion of the welfare of others.
The same Christ who became human to serve now empowers and enables God’s people
in their service to one another.
Shortly following the death of his wife, J. R.
Carmichael entered a nursing home. Yet, if you inquired about him, you learned
that he is never in his room. It seems that each morning Mr. Carmichael would
shower, dress, eat breakfast, and then move from one residential room to
another. In each room, Mr. Carmichael spoke with the resident about their
family, read the Bible to them, prayed with them, and told them that he loved
them. Then it was off to the next room to do the same thing. Mr. Carmichael
missed his wife every day but he never waited for happiness. Happiness found
him, as he loved others deeply.
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