One of the tellers at my bank has a photograph of a Shelby Cobra roadster on his window. (The Cobra is a high-performance automobile built by the Ford Motor Company.)
One day, while transacting business at the bank, I asked him if that was his car. No, he replied, thats my passion, my reason to get up every morning and go to work. Im going to own one someday.
I understand this young mans passion. A friend of mine owned a Cobra, and I drove it on one occasion! Its a mean machine! But a Cobra, like everything else in this world, isnt worth living for. Those who trust in things apart from God are brought to their knees and fall, according to the psalmist (Psalm 20:8).
Thats because we were made for God and nothing else will doa truth we validate in our experience every day: We buy this or that because we think these things will make us happy, but like a child receiving a dozen Christmas presents or more, we ask ourselves, Is this all? Something is always missing.
Nothing this world has to offer useven very good thingsfully satisfies us. There is a measure of enjoyment in them, but our happiness soon fades away (1 John 2:17). Indeed, God cannot give us happiness and peace apart from Himself, C. S. Lewis concluded. There is no such thing.
INSIGHT
Psalm 20 warns against idolatryworshiping and trusting in human objects instead of the Lord Himself. King David saw how easy it could be to shift his trust in the Lord to trust in military might: Some trust in chariots and some in horses, but we trust in the name of the Lord our God (v. 7). In our culture, idolatry can take many different forms. But for the believer theres only One who should be the object of our adoration and the One in whom we place our trust. Its Christ who is the supreme example of courage, character, and compassion.
How is God teaching you that Hes the only true source of satisfaction?