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How To Escape The Rat Race… Forever!
From the series Balancing Life's Demands
Chip wraps up this series with an important reminder about what it takes to be truly successful in your spiritual life, in your relationships, and in your finances.
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About this series
Balancing Life's Demands
Biblical Priorities for a Busy Life
Are you busy, tired, stressed out, and stretched to the limit? Does life seem a little out of control? Are you running long on "to do's" and short on time? In the series, Balancing Life's Demands, you will learn how to put "first things first" and find peace in the midst of pressure and adversity. This isn't about cliches or quick fixes, just practical biblical insights to help you order your personal world.
More from this seriesMessage Transcript
I’d like to start with a little story. There was a very strong Bible church, Bible-teaching church, and they had what they called, years ago, “revival meetings”.
And so, it was a big thing in town, and a lot of people would come from the town. And every year, a number of people would come to Christ, and Christians who needed their priorities realigned would get their priorities realigned.
But they always knew what was going to happen on Friday night. On Friday night, they had a town drunk, and he chose Friday night, and he would come, and he would sit in the back, and he would listen to the message.
And near the end of the message, you would hear, “Ohhh! Amen! Um-hmmm-hmmmm-hmmmm! Yes, Lord, that’s what I need to do!” And so, they would give a time of invitation, where people could come forward and deal with God. And everyone knew, on Friday night, the town drunk came through. I mean, for the last fifteen years, every Friday night, he would come forward.
So, it was Friday night. He had moaned; he had groaned. He had “amened.” And now, he is walking forward. And he comes, and, you know, he sort of had this down: “Oh, Lord! Ohhhh, Lord! Ohhhh, the cobwebs of sin that I have been entangled in! Oh, Lord, I just ask, once, please, remove the cobwebs! Remove the cobwebs in the tangled sin of my life!”
And there was a man – after fifteen years – who’d heard this for fourteen years, and he stood up in the back and, in a very loud voice, said, “Dear Lord, forget the cobwebs! Kill the spider!”
And I’d like to suggest that we’ve really addressed a lot of the cobwebs of priorities, of time, and money, and relationships. And my concern is that you’ll go for two weeks, maybe some of you for two months, and you’ll start knocking out the cobwebs: “Oh, we’ve got a budget now. We’re now giving off the first portion. Okay, I’m starting to spend some time with God.”
But I’d like to suggest that to move beyond the periphery, we need to get to the “kill the spider”.
What’s at the heart of misplaced priorities? What is it that keeps pulling us in ways that our priorities, over and over and over, get out of whack? And Jesus is going to address it.
And if you’ll notice in your notes, He’s going to give a warning, and Jesus will teach us, in Matthew 6:19 through the end of the chapter, that the root problem in priority living is – and here’s the word you can write – materialism. Materialism.
Material things are in no way – listen carefully – evil, in and of themselves. You might jot in the notes – I’ve quoted it several times. 1 Timothy 6:17. Paul says, “Instruct those” – teach those – “who are rich in this present world” – that’s you; that’s me – “not to fix their hope on the uncertainty of riches, but to fix their hope on God, who supplies us with all things to enjoy.” The “all things” are material things. The goal is to enjoy. They can never be my hope. Don’t be conceited. Don’t be arrogant, he says, and fix your hope on those things.
So the problem is not that things are evil, in themselves. It’s when I’m trusting in or even desiring them with the belief that they can fill the inner void in my life and bring significance, security, peace, joy, and meaning.
Now, the structure of this is very important. You’ve noticed in your notes I’ve put it on the right side. The context is – what? It’s Matthew 6, verses 1 through 18.
And remember, He talked about – what? He talked about giving, He talked about prayer, and He talked about fasting. What is the one thing that was true of His teaching about giving, prayer, and fasting?
When you pray, when you fast, when you give, don’t do it like the [Congregation: Pharisees] to be seen of men, but when you do it, do it in secret, so your Father who sees in secret – here’s my point.
Here’s what I want you to get: The context of what we’re going to see is two motives. You can either impress people, or you can please God.
And then, the text will unfold, because the question is, “Well, how do you know what your motives are? I mean, He just told me my motives need to be secret and to pleasing God. Well, how do I know? Who can know what’s in your heart?” Well, in verses 19 through 21, He’s going to say, “Guess what, I will show you a very clear way to know exactly what your motives are. The two motives will reveal two treasures.”
And then, after that, He’s going to say, “Now that you understand that there are two treasures – one eternal and one temporal – I’m going to tell you where those treasures come from. There are two eyes; there are two perspectives about life.” And then, finally, those two perspectives will determine two options, two masters. Let me walk through the passage with you.
Okay, Lord, we understand, when we pray, when we give, when we fast, we need to do it with the right motive. Your means of protecting our motive is secrecy. Well, how do we know what our motives are?
Here’s what He says – verse 19, Matthew 6: “Do not store up for yourselves treasures on earth” – the reason – “where moth and rust destroy, and where thieves break in and steal.” Translation – it’s a bad investment.
“But store up for yourselves” – will you underline the word for yourselves? This is not about deprivation. This is about doing something good for you. “But store up for yourselves treasures in heaven, where moth and rust do not destroy, and where thieves do not break in and steal. For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also.”
And so, He just makes a point. He goes, “If you want to know what your motives are, it’s pretty simple. Where’s your treasure?”
Your money is the greatest, clearest, true revealer of your heart. Our trust always follows our treasure.
And the treasure of money, for sure, but I would also say the treasure of my time, the treasure of my energy. Well, what are the resources? What is the wealth that I have, and where do I spend that wealth? That will tell me my true treasure, my true motives.
And then, there’s this kind of interesting passage – I mean, really interesting little passage here. And notice what it says. He says that, “The eye is the lamp of the body. If your eyes are good” – circle the word good, and then, above it, write the word singular. “If your eyes are good, your whole body will be full of light. But if your eyes are bad” – circle bad, and, actually, then write the word evil underneath that – “your whole body will be full of darkness. If then the light within you is darkness, how great is that darkness!”
Now, it’s really interesting, here. He’s going to say, the eye is the lamp of the body. And He’s using this play on words, and He’s going to help you see that your outlook will determine your outcome. Your perception will determine your pursuits. He’s going to say, what you and I perceive to be as important is what we will passionately pursue. So, I jotted a few thoughts. A mother, her children. A man, his work. An athlete, his workout. An artist, his art. A musician, his music. A Christian, his God.
He says your desire, your core beliefs, your passions, your pursuits, what you believe – if it’s clear, if it’s singular, if it’s on God, if it’s honoring Him, if it’s being the man, the woman that you know He wants you to be – He says your whole body will be full of light. Everything else comes.
He said, however, you can have these external things going on, and religious activities. If your eye is evil, if there’s duplicity, if your deep belief is that things and power and status and possessions can deliver satisfaction, meaning, and significance, He says your whole body will be full of darkness.
Your eye, or desire, if it’s clean, healthy, undivided, and godly – your whole life will be directed and affected by God’s blessing, power, and presence. It has the idea of undivided loyalty to God, singleness of purpose, if you will.
And the point I want to make, here, is simply at the heart of all these things we’re talking about – priorities, time, money, symptoms – He said, “There are two motives in walking with Me.” Those two motives lead to your treasure. Your treasure will tell you where your motives are. But what treasure you pursue has to do with your core beliefs, passions, desires. What do you really, really want? What do you believe – not what you say, not even what you verbalize – but what do your actions demonstrate is your core pursuit in life.
And then, notice what Jesus will say. He says you can have only one of two masters. It will be either mammon or Him. Right after the two eyes. I mean, it’s an amazing thought, here. He says, “No one can serve two masters. Either he will hate the one and love the other, or he’ll be devoted to the one and despise the other. You cannot serve both God and money.” It doesn’t say you cannot have God and have money; it says you cannot serve God and money.
The battle in priorities boils down to, you either have faith in God and His promises for peace, security, significance, and your passion is a relationship with Him, or you have faith in things and their power to deliver for your life. And so, what you have, here is it is clearly laid out as anywhere in Scripture. This is the issue: materialism. It’s a condition of the heart.
How do you go about it? Well, check your motives. There are some practices. Where’s your treasure? It’s the revealer. Check, then, your eye – where’s it focused? And then, finally, your eye will reveal one master or another Master.
Now, here’s the question – I mean, this is the question that brings everything we’ve talked about in the series to a head. Here’s the fundamental question. You’ll notice, I put it in your notes. It says, “Do not allow the pursuit of material things to thwart your spiritual development.” I mean, that’s the statement. That’s what He’s saying.
But then the question is, how can we live in a material world without becoming materialistic?
And you’ll notice, remember when Jesus was talking about spiritual growth and spiritual development, how it happens, and He was talking about the power of God’s Word, and He says, the Word of God is like a seed, and the man went out and sowed the seed. And there are four types of soils, and the soils are the human hearts, and Satan comes and the hard soil takes it away. And there’s one that sprouts up quickly, and then persecution comes, and it dies out.
The third seed – remember, it grows up, but the thorns grow up around it, and it chokes out the life of truth in your heart and soul. Does anybody remember? It’s the worries of the world, the deceitfulness of riches – the deceitfulness.
By the way, when your money is messing you up, when your possessions are messing you up, I got news. You don’t know about it. That’s what deceit means.
And then, that last part. This is why we don’t have margin in our lives. Not just the deceitfulness of riches, but He says, and the concern, the worry, the preoccupation with – what? Other things. What other things? Other things, other than what really matters. He’s talking about priorities.
And so, what I want to do is, I want to walk, now, through verses 24 through 33, and we’re going to get the solution.
Well, let’s pick it up at verse 24. He says, “No one can serve two masters.” We’ve heard that. “Either he’ll hate the one or love the other, or he’ll be devoted to the one and despise the other.” And before we go on, because we are Americans – can you just swallow hard? – you can’t have it both ways, all right? That’s what we want to do: “Oh, I love God with all my heart, and…” All right? You can’t have it both ways, according to Jesus: “You cannot serve both God and money.”
“Therefore I tell you” – therefore. When you see that, what do you mean? Well, what’s He say? “Hey, hey, I understand. This is axiomatic. This is truth. Therefore, let Me give you the solution! Let Me help you learn how not to be materialistic.” “Therefore I tell you, do not worry about your life, what you will eat or drink; or your body, what you will wear.” And then, we get a rhetorical question: “Is not life more important than food, and the body more important than clothes?” And we would all say, “Well, yes.”
Or, illustration number two: “Look at the birds of the air; they don’t sow or reap or store away in barns, and yet your heavenly Father feeds them.” And then, some logic, application: “Are you not much more valuable than they?” And it’s grammatically in such a way that the answer is, overwhelmingly, of course you are.
Then, by the way, “Who of you by worrying can add a single hour to this life?” Logical conclusion – let’s see, no one.
And then, a question: “And why do you worry about clothes?” Illustration number two: I mean, see the lilies of the field? “They don’t labor or spin.” They’re not wiped out. They’re not in minivans and SUVs and having bills up to their eyeballs. They’re not stressed out. They’re not uptight.
It says, “I tell you that Solomon in all of his splendor wasn’t dressed like one of these.” Now, again, the a priori logic, from lesser to greater: “If that is how God clothes the grass of the field, which is here today and tomorrow is thrown in the fire, will He not much more clothe you” – and circle this phrase – “O you of little faith?”
The issue behind materialism, at the core, has nothing to do with things, or even money. It has to do with faith; it has to do with trust: “Do you trust Me? Do you trust Me to come through for you, yes, in the material necessities? But do you trust Me to come through for you, that you’re significant and valuable the way I made you? Do you trust that if you would find My purpose and My role for your life – that you don’t have to look like that, you don’t have to live in that zip code, you don’t have to drive that, you don’t have to have so many people know you? Can you trust Me that if you do life My way, the deepest things that you long for in your heart, I’m going to give you? Because I’m good, and I love you.”
That’s really what He’s getting to. “So do not worry, saying, ‘What are we going to eat?’ or ‘What shall we drink? or ‘What shall we wear?’”
And then, this is more than a mild rebuke, “For the pagans run after all these things, and your heavenly Father knows that you need them.” Put a little line under run after, because He’s going to use a play on words. It means to vigorously pursue. And that verse that we like that’s coming up, that tells us how to really arrange our priorities, where it says, “But seek ye first” – the word seek, this word is an intensive form of that. It’s the same word. The pagans are seeking, are running, are pursuing after all these things.
And His point is that you don’t look any different than the pagans.
The issue behind materialism, at the core, has nothing to do with things, or even money. It has to do with faith; it has to do with trust: “Do you trust Me? Do you trust Me to come through for you, yes, in the material necessities? But do you trust Me to come through for you, that you’re significant and valuable the way I made you? Do you trust that if you would find My purpose and My role for your life – that you don’t have to look like that, you don’t have to live in that zip code, you don’t have to drive that, you don’t have to have so many people know you? Can you trust Me that if you do life My way, the deepest things that you long for in your heart, I’m going to give you? Because I’m good, and I love you.”
That’s really what He’s getting to. “So do not worry, saying, ‘What are we going to eat?’ or ‘What shall we drink? or ‘What shall we wear?’”
And then, this is more than a mild rebuke, “For the pagans run after all these things, and your heavenly Father knows that you need them.” Put a little line under run after, because He’s going to use a play on words. It means to vigorously pursue. And that verse that we like that’s coming up, that tells us how to really arrange our priorities, where it says, “But seek ye first” – the word seek, this word is an intensive form of that. It’s the same word. The pagans are seeking, are running, are pursuing after all these things.
And His point is that you don’t look any different than the pagans.
Who’s He talking to? “Hey, Pete, you’ve got to watch out for the…James, John, listen up on this one.” These are His disciples, and the crowd is overhearing. These are issues that the faithful will struggle with.
He says, “Guys, you know, I’m going to leave, and I’m going to cut out of here, and there’s a mission and I am the Messiah, and God has a plan for the world. And I love you, and I’ll take care of you, and there are things that really matter, and eternity really is real, and there’s a real, real heaven, and there’s a real, real hell, and I’ve chosen you, and this is the character and quality and the rewards of a kingdom citizen, and I want you to be salt and light and live it out, and I want you to know that your righteousness has to exceed that of the Pharisees, because what I’m telling you, it’s issues of the heart! I mean, I’m telling you, guys, I came to give life to the world, and I want you to be the conduits of My grace.
“But you know what? There are going to be two motives. You can play that game, and you see it. There are going to be two treasures. You’re going to have to decide. And it’s going to get down to how you look at life! Are you going to use ministry as a platform for the same junk of people thinking highly of you and impressing them and all the rest? Or, are you going to have the singular eye, the single focus? Because, guys, I want you to know, I’m going to check out of here, and you’re either going to worship Me, or you’re going to worship mammon.” It’s the Aramaic word for possessions, property, and money. It’s just materialism.
I want to go back through and make some observations of verse 24 through 27, and then, we’ll come back to the solution, where it says, “But seek first” – doesn’t that sound like a priority deal? – “His kingdom” – that’s where Christ’s rulership is reigning, where we’re doing things God’s way. He’s the CEO of the universe, and you say, “Ahh, since You’re running the whole world, why don’t You be the CEO of my life, too?” It’s really what He’s saying. And you seek first His agenda, instead of your own, and you’re seeking first His righteousness. So, it’s about character development.
What if every parent was as committed to the character development of their kids as they are to how good they could be in all these athletic teams and ballet and music and on and on and on and on?
These are good, loving people who just find themselves in a maze of activity pulled, the school activities here and here and youth here, and this here and this here, and then youth group here, and the church does this, and this does this, and this does this, and – why? “Well, because my kids have to have the best, and we have to prepare them.” Why? “So they can get ahead.” Why? “So they can get good jobs.”
Why? “So they can make a lot of money.” Why? “So they can be happy.” Ehhhh! Ehhhh! Wrong paradigm. Is that who’s happy? “Well, all the other couples in the church are doing it, and their kids are playing all the seventeen sports, and I don’t want my little Missy to miss out!” I mean, you know?
Now, is it wrong to play youth sports? Of course not. But you know what? What would happen if you started with, “We’re going to have great times as a family. We’re going to really meet with God. My first responsibility is, I’m going to have fun, and I’m going to teach my kids.”
I mean, imagine the deep relationship that occurs when, three nights a week, I’m sitting in little stands, feeling like I’m being a good parent, as my kids are running around being yelled at by other parents, who probably don’t know how to coach the sport anyway. And then, we have to hustle supper, and then, it’s late to do the homework, and you know what? He’s out there in that little uniform that I can’t believe they made us pay that much, and you have no relationship with him, or her.
And then, you’re under pressure going home, and then they go to bed, and then you get up early and you do the same thing again. And then, your kids wake up, and you took them to church every week. Some of you even put them in a Christian school. And you tried to model the life, and then, you know, at eighteen, nineteen, after one year of college, they say, “Man, I don’t know what this Jesus-church-religious stuff is, but all – I’m worn out, and I don’t – I don’t need it or want it.” And then, we say, “Lord?”
And see, it’s not bad stuff. The enemy of the best of God’s will is never bad stuff – you’re smart people. It’s good stuff. Good is always the enemy of the best.
And to follow this passage, I’m telling you, you’ll get unpopular. “You’re not allowing your kids to do three sports this time? You’re not allowing them to be in the play, do this, do this, do this, do this, do this, and…?”
Figure out what God wants you to do. Get focused. Simplify your life. Get a handle on your money, on your time, in alignment with, “What am I supposed to be, and what am I called to do?” And then, just cut some stuff loose. I mean, just get out the old spiritual butcher knife – Slop! Swap! I mean, just – “I’m not doing that anymore.”
And, oh, you’ll struggle and feel guilty, and good, loving people, “You can’t do that. Our program could never go on without you. You are the source of our church program. The ladies will never go on without you!” Well, then, you got a bad program, because we all thought they could not go on without Jesus. Right? So, that’s what we need to talk about.
Look what Jesus says – the symptom of materialism – anxiety, is the mark of a life preoccupied with material things. And if you have that pen handy, you want to do a quick little Bible study? Look at verse 25: “Do not worry.”
Skip down to verse 27, you can underline that: “Who of you by worrying…” Skip down to verse 28: “Why do you worry?” – underline that. Skip down to verse 31: “So do not worry.” Verse 34: “Therefore” – just in case you missed the first four or five “do not worries” – this is Jesus – “Therefore do not worry about tomorrow.”
Well, I mean, we are just fixated on all the things that might or could happen, or what we’ve got to do today in order to take care of tomorrow. “Do not worry about tomorrow” – why? – “for tomorrow will worry about itself. Each day has enough trouble of its own.”
The meaning of worry – I love the Spanish word for worry. Do you know what it is? Preocupado. It means “be preoccupied”. See, we always think of worry as, I’m wringing my hands, and I’m so uptight about this. The Greek word for worry has this idea of a divided mind, of being torn in two different directions, of being pulled in opposite directions. And the root problem is lack of faith. See, I’m always hedging my bets. You know, If this doesn’t work out, I need to do this relationship and this relationship, and I need to do this and this, and I’m afraid I’ll miss out.
How can you miss out if God is good, God is sovereign, and you’re listening to Him? The frantic pace of our life is you don’t want your kids to miss out, you don’t want to miss out, and since you don’t clearly know the way, you try to do more than God ever intended, and then you blame God for how tired you are “doing His will.” It’s about faith. Stop the preoccupation. Cleanse the calendar. Cleanse the relationships.
I mean, some of you have some people that, you know what? If God was going to use you to help them, they’d be helped by now. I mean, how many times can you hear the same thing? “Eh-na-na-na-na.” And the only reason you’re meeting with them is guilt. It’s the only reason. It’s not being led by God.
Notice, the acid test of materialism is not how much I have or don’t have, but my preoccupation and concern over it. Did you get that? I can be preoccupied and concerned over all the tons of stuff that I do have, or I can be preoccupied and concerned of what I don’t have and what I need. Either way, it’s materialism. The explanation – He says, “Stop your preoccupation with material things.”
Why? Look at verse 25. He says because it’s shortsighted. He says, “Don’t worry about your life, what you’re going to eat what you’re going to drink.” He’s saying, there’s more to life than things. And His motive, here, is to protect us and our wellbeing. Material things are unable to meet the deepest needs of your life.
Second, He says it’s illogical. Here’s the application: Look at the birds, look at the flowers. I mean, aren’t you more important than them? Yes. So, it’s that classical argument. He says, look, it’s shortsighted. It’s impractical.
At the end of the day, what is it that really matters? What has value? If you wrote down the top five memories in your life, what would you write down? Let me get you started: wedding day, birth of a child, birth of a grandchild, a deep friendship, times with your family, recovery from cancer.
How many of those are material? Have you ever gone to, you know, after the funeral – I’ve done lots of them – and you go to someone’s house and hang out, have a little food, and you talk about the person. Have any of you gone to one of those, and people get around little tables, and all the people made nice little food, and have you ever been to one of those, and maybe a group of guys in the corner, “Did that guy have a nice car, or what? I mean, you know what? If I had a 401(k) – in fact, he had a 501(3b), and a 401(k). He was capital “B”. He was thirty-two on Forbes’ list. Man, did he look good dead! Whoo! Man. Do you understand, did you know that…?”
I’ve never heard that. The only thing we talk about when people are gone is – what? Either how they modeled their relationship and love for God, and what they did in their relationships. Period. Period.
And the saddest funerals I’ve ever been to have been with the kids, who knew the inside story. And funerals – people are the biggest liars at funerals. Oh, my lands. “Oh, Bob, he was duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh,” and the kids are going, “Uh-uh. He wasn’t home. He was a jerk. He had anger management issues. He never talked to me.” But I will tell you, when someone has lived well and died well – actually, as hard as it is to let go, it’s sweet time. Man, it’s sweet when you see life.
And you know what? Jesus said, “I’m trying to protect you.” Some of you, if you could just relax, you relax and seek first His kingdom and His righteousness, He might scare you and just make you rich. And some of you will wish, later, that He hadn’t. But He just says you can’t – don’t buy the lie. This is really about a lie.
He says it’s unprofitable – verse 27 – right? Can you add a single day by worrying or being preoccupied by material things? All it produces is ulcers and migraines and dysfunctional families and sleeplessness.
It’s disgraceful. He says, the pagans run after this. When Christians live frantic, preoccupied lives, thinking that all those things and what they can accomplish…we don’t look any different than the world. That little tract that we give them, “Hey, why don’t you come to our church? We have eleven activities every week. Your life can get as busy as ours.” But we’re doing it for Jesus.
The promise: If you will pursue knowing Christ and making Him known – verse 33 – as your first priority, He will meet all your material needs. Run, seek, pursue after Christ, knowing Him and serving Him, and let Him tell you what to do with your time.
And God says, “I will tell you what, I’ll work out a way that we can get those kids through school, and those house payments, we can work those out. I’ll help you with those.” And use your brains. Be wise. Make the good investments.
I came across an article I want to close with, because this really is a warning. It’s an article about California, a cover story. “When Jim Smallridge went to bed at his parents’ house in rural San Diego County late Saturday, he wasn’t concerned about wildfires. They were ravaging the Cleveland National Forest fifteen miles away, a distant glow in the night.
“He awoke a few hours later to find flames in his parents’ front yard. ‘It was on us like that,’ he said, ‘chasing us,’ says Smallridge, forty-two years old. ‘I knew that if we didn’t get out in a matter of minutes, we’d be dead.’ Minutes, it turned out, were all the residents of Lakeside had. After frantically knocking on neighbors’ doors, Smallridge managed to escape with his son Shawn, eighteen, by driving their pickup truck through a two hundred-foot-wide wall of flame that blocked the only road out of the neighborhood.” Now, imagine that: “It’s here. We’ve got to go. Tell the neighbors.” So, he tells the neighbors. “Son, get in the truck.” Pshhhh – and who knows what’s on the other side of it. They come through the flames.
“‘Others weren’t quick enough,’ Smallridge recalls. They disregarded his frantic warnings, or they responded too casually. Several wanted to save their televisions and computers. ‘They looked like they were packing for a trip,’ he said. ‘The ones who listened to me and left the area immediately, lived. The ones who didn’t, died.’” Feels a little bit like God speaking through Moses: “I put before you today a blessing and a curse. Choose life.”
It’s not about things, or how much you have or don’t have. It is a condition of the heart that arrives and starts, first, with motives. You discover it through these two treasures. It gets to the core of two eyes, singular or duplicity. And then, it results in two masters, either God or mammon. And the only way to live in a materialistic world and not be materialistic is what Jesus said: “Seek first His kingdom,” His rule, His authority, in everything, in every situation, “and His righteousness” – is that’s the primary goal, to become like Jesus – “and all” – that’s a pretty big word – “all these things will be added to you.” That’s why Paul would say, “Don’t fix your eyes on these things.” But then, he said, “Richly enjoy all these things that God gives you,” when they’re gifts.