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You can have more money, more status, and more comfort than you ever imagined and still feel hollow. That is not a failure of effort; it is a clue about what the human heart is made for. Today’s Field Notes devotional builds off our sermon “Happy Are the Humble” and zooms in on a single line that cuts through a lot of noise: the external cannot fill the internal.
We walk through Ecclesiastes and the story of King Solomon, a man who had access to everything and openly admitted he denied himself nothing his eyes desired. His verdict is sobering and strangely relatable: chasing meaning through stuff, success, and pleasure can feel like striving after the wind. If you’ve been tying happiness to circumstances, this is a reset for your expectations and a relief for your soul.
From there, we get painfully practical about modern idols. We talk about why your spouse is not meant to be your savior, why your kids cannot carry your deepest purpose, and why a promotion will never heal what’s broken inside. Then we give a clear next step: identify the one earthly thing you believe would finally fix your internal unrest, and practice letting it go in prayer so your satisfaction is rooted in Jesus, not the next “thing.”
If this encouraged you, subscribe, share it with a friend who feels stuck on the treadmill, and leave a review so more people can find this devotional. What is the one thing you’re most tempted to chase for happiness right now?
By Mission SentYou can have more money, more status, and more comfort than you ever imagined and still feel hollow. That is not a failure of effort; it is a clue about what the human heart is made for. Today’s Field Notes devotional builds off our sermon “Happy Are the Humble” and zooms in on a single line that cuts through a lot of noise: the external cannot fill the internal.
We walk through Ecclesiastes and the story of King Solomon, a man who had access to everything and openly admitted he denied himself nothing his eyes desired. His verdict is sobering and strangely relatable: chasing meaning through stuff, success, and pleasure can feel like striving after the wind. If you’ve been tying happiness to circumstances, this is a reset for your expectations and a relief for your soul.
From there, we get painfully practical about modern idols. We talk about why your spouse is not meant to be your savior, why your kids cannot carry your deepest purpose, and why a promotion will never heal what’s broken inside. Then we give a clear next step: identify the one earthly thing you believe would finally fix your internal unrest, and practice letting it go in prayer so your satisfaction is rooted in Jesus, not the next “thing.”
If this encouraged you, subscribe, share it with a friend who feels stuck on the treadmill, and leave a review so more people can find this devotional. What is the one thing you’re most tempted to chase for happiness right now?