How can a Christian be content and thankful, even with very little? How is it true that having very little with righteousness is better than great revenues with injustice? There is a reason why Christian contentment is described as a ‘rare jewel’ by Jeremiah Borroughs in his book, The Rare Jewel of Christian Contentment. In a culture that is fixed on gaining, the Christian fights against greed for contentment. 

Why is contentment described as a rare Jewel? Because Christians have the ability to be satisfied, even when their possessions dwindle. Here are 5 reasons, taken from chapter 3, why the Christian can be content with very little.

Recommended Book: The Rare Jewel of Christian Contentment, by Jeremiah Borroughs. Click here to buy this book and support our podcast!

 

  1. The Little is an expression of God’s Love

Christians enjoy contentment in the little they have because in what they have, they have the love of God to them. In other words, this “little” is an expression of God’s love, and so it is much more than the littleness of the condition itself. Here is an excerpt from Chapter 3:

“If a king were to send a piece of meat from his own table, it would be a great deal more pleasant to a poor subject of his kingdom, than if he had twenty dishes some other way. If the king sends even a little thing and says, ‘Go and carry it to my dear subject as a token of my love,’ Oh, how delightful would that be to him!”

“Every good thing the people of God enjoy, they enjoy it in God’s love.” It is “a token of God’s love . . . and this must be very sweet to them.”

 

     2. The Little is Sanctified To Me For My Good

Christians enjoy contentment in the little they have because the little they have is sanctified to them for their good. Christians receive everything from God’s hand as a gift, but it never comes by itself. It always comes with God’s accompanying purpose to sanctify us by it,  and the amount of it is perfectly suited to his good purposes for us.

“But the saints have it in a special way.” The saint says, “I have it, and I have a sanctified use of it too; God goes along with what I have to draw my heart nearer to him, and sanctify my heart to him.” 

“If I find my heart drawn nearer to God by what I enjoy, that is much more than if I had great wealth but no sanctifying influence with it.”

 

     3. The Little is Free of Cost from the Father’s Hand

Christians enjoy contentment in the little they have because this little is free of cost; he does not have to pay for it.

“The difference between what a godly man has and a wicked man, is this: A godly man is as a child in an inn. The inn-keeper has his child in the house, and provides his diet, and lodging, and what is needful for him. But a stranger comes, and he has dinner and supper provided, and lodging, but the stranger must pay for everything.”

“It may be that the child’s meal is simple, and the stranger has a great feast, but there must come a reckoning for it.”

Behind this insight is Romans 2:4–5: “Do you not know that God’s kindness is meant to lead you to repentance? But because of your hard and impenitent heart you are storing up wrath for yourself on the day of wrath when God’s righteous judgment will be revealed.”

If a person is not led to repentance and conversion through God’s gifts, “there must come a reckoning.” All will pay.

“Just so it is: many of God’s people have only a simple meal, but God as a Father provides it, and it is free of cost, they need not pay for what they have; it is already paid for. Is it not better to have a little, free of cost, than to have to pay for everything?”

 

     4. The Little is Bought by Christ

Christians enjoy contentment in the little they have because what they have, they have by the purchase and the rights of Jesus Christ. The unrepentant person is like the criminal on death row…

“A criminal is condemned to die, and yet by favor he has his supper provided overnight. Now though the criminal has forfeited all his right to all things, to every bit of bread, yet if he is given his supper he does not steal it. . . . But if a man is given a supper overnight before his execution, is that the kind of supper he hopes to have in his own house with his wife and children about him? Would it matter if it were even a great feast? Oh, a dish of green herbs would be a great deal better than any dainties in such a supper as that.”

The Christian has his meal by right — the right of Christ. It has been bought for him. It comes to him through the purchase of Christ. “Every bit of bread you eat, if you are a godly man or woman, Jesus Christ has bought it for you.” This makes the little that you have far sweeter to you than the wealth of the unbeliever.

 

     5. The Best is Yet to Come

Christians enjoy contentment in the little they have because the little that they have is a down payment for all the glory that is reserved for them.

“Now if a man has but twelve pence given to him as a down payment for some great possession that he must have, is that not better than if he had forty pounds given to him otherwise? So every comfort that the saints have in this world is an down payment to them of those eternal mercies that the Lord has provided for them.”

“Just as every affliction that the wicked have here is but the forerunner of those eternal sorrows that they are likely to have hereafter in Hell, so every comfort you have is a forerunner of those eternal mercies you shall have with God in Heaven.”

 

This rare jewel of Christian contentment is a great mystery to the unbelieving.

 

“I have what I have from the love of God, and I have it sanctified to me by God, and I have it free of cost from God, by the purchase of the blood of Jesus Christ, and I have it as a forerunner of those eternal mercies that are reserved for me.” – John Piper