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"Why is it difficult to be content when you have so much?
On the surface, it seems unnecessary to instruct someone to be
content in times of prosperity. However, times of prosperity and
abundance provide some of the strongest temptations to pull our
hearts away from God. Jeremiah Burroughs was keenly aware that the
riches of this world compete for our affections and challenge our
contentment in Christ. Originally prepared as an appendix to The
Rare Jewel of Christian Contentment, this book provides an
important conclusion to Burroughs's sermon series on Philippians
4:11 12: "I have learned in whatsoever state I am, therewith to be
content. I know both how to be abased, and I know how to abound:
every where and in all things I am instructed both to be full and
to be hungry, both to abound and to suffer need."
"Jeremiah Burroughs's "Hosea" combines exegetical rigor,
theological astuteness, and experimental refreshment. In the great
tradition of Puritan biblical exposition, Burroughs opens the
inspired text, and has the text address the human heart. He mines
the text for its meaning and doctrine, and translates his insights
into wonderful applications. With great skill and ease, Burroughs
sounds out Hosea's message - its threats of judgment, its calls to
repentance, its promises of mercy, and its prophecies of Christ.
Still today, Burroughs makes them resonate clearly and
compellingly." -- Gerald M. Bilkes, Puritan Reformed Theological
Seminary
While hundreds of even Christian books today purport to help
readers find contentment and happiness, few-if any-survive the test
of time or human experience. This great book, written almost 400
years ago by Jeremiah Burroughs, addresses the basic problems of
human suffering and discontent. More than that, it offers a
timeless and tested solution. Like many other 16th and 17th century
writers, Burroughs didn't mince words, cater to the fickle tastes
of the reading public, or care about political correctness. He
preached the truth. True contentment, he argued, is achieved by
subtraction rather than addition; by surrender rather than
struggle. The depth of thought by Jeremiah Burroughs and his fellow
Puritan writers is rarely approached by modern authors. Burroughs
takes readers through the ABC's of Christian living, pointing out
that the root of discontentment is very often the failure to desire
God's will in everything. Because true contentment comes from the
inward state of the heart (rather than outer circumstances), a
Christian can be content regardless of circumstances. The
importance of learning to be content, for the Christian, would be
difficult to overstate. Contentment helps in the battle against
temptation, prepares the Christian for service, and brings comfort
no matter how bleak the current outlook might be. "Certainly our
contentment does not consist in getting the thing we desire, but in
God's fashioning our spirits to our conditions," wrote Burroughs.
He understood the big picture-that Christians who learn to be more
content can better serve and glorify God. That fact, in the end, is
why this book remains so important and useful for followers of
Christ. Read and meditate upon this great work It will set your
heart on fire and elevate your soul.
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