Jan. 30, 2026

Contentment in a Consumer Culture

Contentment in a Consumer Culture

Always chasing the next upgrade and never feeling satisfied with what you have? In this episode, discover how contentment is learned, not automatic, and why finding your sufficiency in Christ is the only way off the treadmill of always wanting more.

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Always chasing the next upgrade and never feeling satisfied with what you have? In this episode, discover how contentment is learned, not automatic, and why finding your sufficiency in Christ is the only way off the treadmill of always wanting more.

Have you ever gotten the thing you wanted, only to find yourself eyeing the next thing within days?

We live in a consumer culture that profits from your dissatisfaction. Every ad, every feed, every storefront is designed to make you feel like what you have isn't enough. Your phone is too old. Your house is too small. Your wardrobe is out of style. And the message is relentless: more will make you happy. But it never does. The goalposts keep moving. The hunger never stops. And somewhere along the way, you realize you've been chasing a satisfaction that never arrives.

In this episode, we look at Richard Foster, a Quaker theologian who grew up believing what most of us do, that more would eventually equal satisfied. But the more he accumulated, the less peace he felt. In his classic book Celebration of Discipline, Foster writes about simplicity as a spiritual discipline, not poverty forced on you, but freedom chosen by you. It's an inner release from the tyranny of wanting.

Through his story and Philippians 4:11–12, you'll see that the Apostle Paul had to learn contentment. It didn't come naturally to him, and it won't come naturally to us either. But the secret isn't in your circumstances finally lining up—it's in finding your sufficiency in Christ alone.

BY THE TIME YOU FINISH LISTENING, YOU'LL DISCOVER:

  1. Why the constant pursuit of more drains your peace instead of filling your soul
  2. How Paul learned to be content whether he had plenty or little, and what that means for you
  3. Practical ways to train yourself in contentment and break free from the endless cycle of wanting

The secret to contentment isn't getting more. It's realizing that Christ is enough.

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A Quaker grows up in a culture that measures success by

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accumulation, bigger house, nicer car, and a fuller closet.

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Richard Foster believed what most of us do, that more would

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eventually equal satisfied. But the more he accumulated, the

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less peace he felt. The constant pursuit of the next upgrade

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wasn't filling him. It was draining him. He began to

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realize that wanting more was stealing his peace and

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distracting him from God. In a world that bombards you with

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messages to upgrade, improve, and never settle, why would

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anyone deliberately choose to stop chasing

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more? Welcome to Daily Devotions for Busy Lives. I'm Bart Léger.

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I've been a pastor for over 40 years, and like most of you, I

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have times when I struggle with the constant pull to want more.

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About that, Philippians chapter 4, verses 11 and 12 says, Not

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that I was ever in need, for I have learned how to be content

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with whatever I have. I know how to live on almost nothing or

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with everything. I have learned the secret of living in every

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situation, whether it is with a full stomach or empty, with

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plenty or little. Notice what Paul says, I have learned how to

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be content. Contentment didn't come naturally to him. It wasn't

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automatic. He had to learn it. And if the apostle Paul had to

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learn contentment, we shouldn't be surprised that we do too. We

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live in a consumer culture that profits from your

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dissatisfaction. Every ad and every feed, every storefront is

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designed to make you feel like what you have isn't enough. Your

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phone is too old. Your clothes are out of style. Your house is

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too small. Your car needs an upgrade. And the message is

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relentless. More will make you happy. But it never does. At

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least not for long. You get the thing you wanted. And within

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weeks, sometimes days, you're already eyeing the next thing.

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The goalposts keep moving. The hunger never stops. And

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somewhere along the way, you realize you've been chasing a

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satisfaction that never arrives. That's the trap Paul escaped. He

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learned to be content whether he had plenty or little, whether

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his stomach was full or empty. His peace wasn't tied to his

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circumstances. It was tied to Christ. That's the secret he's

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talking about. Not a trick or technique, but a person. When

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your sufficiency is in Christ, you don't need the next upgrade

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to feel okay. You don't need more to be at peace. You can

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hold what you have with an open hand because your identity and

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security aren't wrapped up in your stuff. Contentment isn't

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the same as laziness or lack of ambition. It doesn't mean you

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never work hard or never improve your situation. It means you're

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not enslaved to the endless pursuit of more. It means you

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can look at what you have and say, "This is enough," because

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Christ is enough. In his classic book, Celebration of Discipline,

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Foster writes about simplicity as a spiritual discipline. Not

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poverty forced on you, but freedom chosen by This is

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something you don't want to be written by you. It's an inner

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release from the tyranny of wanting. Foster discovered that

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contentment isn't something you stumble into when you finally

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have enough. It's something you train yourself in day by day and

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choice by choice. He describes it as learning to say, "This is

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sufficient." When everything around you screams, "You need

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more." The Apostle Paul says he learned contentment. The Apostle

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Paul says he learned contentment. But it didn't come naturally.

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Neither will it for us. But the secret isn't in your

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circumstances finally lining up. It's in finding your sufficiency

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in Christ alone. And that's a lesson worth learning. So how do

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you actually learn contentment in a world that's constantly

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telling you to want more? Start by noticing the discontentment.

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Pay attention to the moments when you feel that pull, the

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scroll that makes you envious, the ad that makes you feel

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behind, the comparison that steals your gratitude. And name

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it for what it is. Then practice gratitude on purpose. Instead of

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focusing on what you don't have, thank God for what you do have.

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Gratitude is the antidote to the "more" mentality. And, most

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importantly, anchor your identity in Christ, not in your

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possessions. Remind yourself daily that your worth isn't

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measured by what you own. You are already fully loved, fully

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accepted, and fully provided for in Him. Here's today's challenge:

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take an inventory of your want the things you've been telling

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yourself you need. "chasing the next thing?" Then, instead of

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focusing on what you don't have, write down five things you're

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grateful for right now. Pray something like this: "Lord,

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teach me to be content. Help me to find my sufficiency in you,

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not in more stuff. Free me from the tyranny of always wanting.

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Show me that what I have is enough, because you're enough.

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Lord, we confess that we often chase more instead of resting in

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you. We let ads and comparisons tell us that we're not enough,

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that we don't have enough. Forgive us. Teach us, the secret

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Paul learned, to be content in every situation, because our

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sufficiency is in you. Free us from the endless pursuit of more,

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and fill us with gratitude for what we already have. In Jesus

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name, Amen. If you're walking through a season where

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discontentment has been stealing your peace and you need prayer,

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I'd love to lift you up. Leave me a voicemail at

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dailydevotionsforbusylives.com/voicemail , and I'll pray for you by name.

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Thanks for joining me on Daily Devotions for Busy Lives.

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Remember, contentment is learned, not automatic, and it comes from

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finding your sufficiency in Christ, not your circumstances.

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Come back next time for more encouragement to help you live

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grounded in God's truth. Until then, God bless, and have a

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great day.