
By Ingrid Lawrenz
Money, or the lack of it, is a
perennial problem for ministry
families. It’s so easy to buy into
the American dream that money
will bring us happiness. There’s
always an emotional aspect to our finances.
Buying into the American dream promotes
the elusive fantasy that money brings
happiness, and that just a little more than
what you have right now will be enough.
We often feel a hunger and emptiness that
drives us. We want to fill it with more: more
money, more food, more romance. However,
trying to fill this desire for more, this hole, is
futile. Edward, in C. S. Lewis’ The Lion, the
Witch and the Wardrobe, could never be
satisfied with enough Turkish taffy. He
always wanted more. Likewise, we think
more will satisfy us. We feel deprived, we
feel deserving, we ache, and we nervously
fret for more. Some women even become
severely depressed, feeling caught in a black
hole of emptiness. But “enough” never
comes, unless we confront the lie itself. The
Bible calls this a “continual lust for more”
(Eph. 4:19). Even Adam and Eve wanted
more. They ate from the forbidden tree
because Satan lied to them. Wanting more,
they ended up with less.
This longing for more is the earthly
symptom of incompleteness and sin this side
of glory. It’s a frame of mind more than a
circumstance. The desire for more is
sometimes that universal hunger for heaven, a
longing for the only One who can truly fill us
– God Himself. We can be satisfied, fulfilled,
and content with Christ.
Of course, real financial problems are
difficult, so the Bible exhorts the church to
generously provide for its leaders. However,
our discontent often comes when we make
comparisons and when we envy. As
missionaries or pastors’ wives we cannot
begin to compare or compete with the
wealthy in our congregations. We have
followed a sacrificial call into ministry. If we
are angry about this, we need to take our
feelings to God instead of blaming our
husbands.
John Stuart Mill said, “I have learned to
seek my happiness not by trying to fulfill all
my desires but by limiting them.” What a
novel idea! We need to train our appetites, not
be driven by them. We’re surrounded by so
much stuff and so many opportunities. Most
of it is good, but it’s more than we can
humanly afford or can fit into our schedule.
Even our children are bombarded with so
many sports, lessons and activities that they
can forget how to just relax and play.
Limiting our expansive desires and interests
can lead to peace.
Lord, deliver me from envy and the lust for more. Fill me with the hope
of Your fulfillment instead. Help me to lead a God-filled, not a stuff-filled,
life. Please help me to be content with what I have so I can focus on
realities of greater value. Amen.
Joseph Novello, in his book The Myth of
More, says, “I desire to want what I have and
not want what I do not have.” Think about
that – wanting what you already have – and
not desiring more. Shopping, planning, and
hunting for sales and coupons produces
adrenaline, but returning, storing, cleaning,
rearranging, and moving them all take our
precious life energy. The “stuff” can control
us. We can become dependent on our
belongings, feeling obliged to use them and
take care of them.
Challenging the myth that more makes us
happy can lead to a reframing of our lives.
“Who” is more important to us than “what”.
Think of what we could do with the extra
time we would have if we were no longer
handling so much stuff!
Practically speaking, there is peace in
simplicity. A couple of nice-looking outfits
are better than a stuffed closet. The bulging
closet brings the stress of choosing what to
wear, what fits, what matches, and what to
wear occasionally to justify buying it in the
first place. It may take a little humility, but is
pride worth the price?
Consider borrowing or renting instead of
buying. For example, renting a boat, a trailer,
mountain bikes, or other things we
occasionally use, will not only save money
but will save us hours of upkeep and storage.
Ask if owning them will actually bring
contentment or extra anxiety.
Jesus said He neither had a home nor bed of
His own. He lived a simple life. People
mattered to Him, as did doing the will of His
Father in heaven. Satan tempted Him in the
wilderness with the myth of more. Satan
promised, “All this I will give you,” he said,
“if you will bow down and worship me”
(Matt. 4:9). Ironically, as with all of Satan’s
lies, Jesus would not have gained more, He
would have lost everything.
It is a blessing to have enough money to
live without fear. Yet, we need to be wise and
discerning about what we need and what we
chase after to gain happiness. The seminary
years are usually a sparse and tense time of
life; but it seems that as soon as the fear of
survival ends, the lust for fulfilling all desires
enters. It is then that credit card bills can get
out of control. Debt can cause far more stress,
and outweigh any pleasure we may get from
the things we buy.
Learning to live as a spiritual being in this
physical and material world is a perennial
problem. Jesus spoke to this issue when He
challenged us to build up heavenly treasure
that will not be destroyed by moth or rust. We
need His help daily.
Ingrid Lawrenz is a ministry wife in
Brookfield, Wis. Using her Master’s in Social
Work, Ingrid works as a clinical social
worker at New Life Resources, a Christian
outpatient mental health clinic. She and her
husband, Mel, have two children.
Also read:
Finding a Balance
Friendships Made in Heaven
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