I don’t post on Saturday’s but wanted you to read this.

I read this after writing my last two posts about this very same subject. I really like what she has to say and wanted to share it with you. I thought of just including a web link but you might not take the time to click it, etc. So I’m including it here with all credit being given to the author.

God bless. I hope you enjoy this.

When Enough is Better Than MoreMyquillyn SmithMYQUILLYN SMITH
October 24, 2018
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“And God is able to give you more than you need, so that you will always have all you need for yourselves and more than enough for every good cause.” 2 Corinthians 9:8 (GNT)
Over the years, I’ve furnished our home mainly through second-hand finds and a few dollars in my pocket.

Devotion GraphicI’ve found chairs for our tables, dishes to eat from and wall art to hang. I loved hunting for bargains and finding things we could use that also made our house feel welcoming and cozy. This served us well when our family was young, and we truly needed a chair next to the table. But I ignored the warning signs that our little house was filling up with bargain-bought stuff.

Without realizing it, I had unofficially taken on another career. I was becoming a Stuff Manager, and here was my job description:

Look through stuff, put away stuff, organize stuff, feel guilty because I haven’t organized other stuff, fuss at my kids about their stuff, wade through misplaced stuff in our garage, pile up stuff on the table, pack away stuff and move around stuff. Ask my husband where he put his stuff, and sort, wash and dry other stuff.

Then, I would dream about more stuff that I wanted and the bigger house I “needed” so it could hold more stuff because I thought our house was too small.

I never planned on spending so much time managing stuff; it just kind of happened.

Over time, my collection of stuff made my life difficult, all in the name of trying to create a pretty, functional, cozy and inviting home. I thought a bunch of stuff was what made a home and defined my style. Instead, it was all getting in my way.

I was afraid to let go of things because I didn’t trust I would have what I needed in the future.

I was ignoring the still small voice that was whispering the word, Enough.

Enough doesn’t mean everything is perfect; it simply means we have enough because we’ve met a goal. Whether that’s in our home, our closet, on our dinner plate or our schedule, we get to say, “That’s enough.”

We don’t say we have enough because we don’t know how to get more; we say “enough” because we don’t want or need more. We’ve decided to end the quest for more because there’s something we want more than more.

I used to view every empty space on a wall, every empty hanger, every inch on my plate as an unfinished thing or an empty space that needed filling. I thought it was my job to fill it.

No more.

I now see empty space as a gift.

Having white space or margin in my home, schedule and walls is just as important as having margin in my life.

Once I realized I had enough, I was free to see places in my life where I had extra, and then, something amazing happened. I wanted to share it. This is what happens when you finally realize you’ve had enough all along: You are free to give the rest away.

Letting go of the extra chair or clothes I don’t need, or opening up our home and space to others has been an act of trust and a gift to others and to myself. I’m learning to trust that if God provided something good now, He’ll provide it again in the future if it’s what we truly need.

God’s Word reminds us of this truth in 2 Corinthians 9:8, “And God is able to give you more than you need so that you will always have all you need for yourselves and more than enough for every good cause.”

I’m free to part with my extras, and I’m learning that the definition of enough is usually a lot less than I thought.

Dear God, help me recognize where I already have enough. Change my definition of enough, and show me where to share my extra. In Jesus’ Name, Amen.