| WOMENI Want It All, Now! By Tracie Peterson and Allison Bottke
 
 CBN.com  The Lie: I deserve to have it all, and to have it all right   now.               "The cost of a thing is the amount of what I call life which is required to   be exchanged for it, immediately or in the long run."--HENRY DAVID THOREAU   
               Face it: The encouragement to have it all, and to have it all right now, is   everywhere. From our first waking moment, until we close our eyes at night, we   are told we are entitled to more, to bigger, to better. Every product out there   is designed and promoted to somehow entitle us to more luxury, time, effortless   existence, or happiness.   
               We hear that we deserve a break today, that we should expect more, and that   we shouldn't have to do without or wait even an extra day. The ads are   everywhere. Gone are the adages "Good things come to those who wait."; "Patience   is a virtue"; "Anything worth having is worth waiting for."   
               When I was a teenager, credit cards weren't yet in common use. But finance   companies were more than happy to fill the gap. They offered loans to send you   on your way to well-deserved vacations or to buy that new car that would somehow   drive you into utopia. They encouraged and enticed you to believe that you   shouldn't have to wait—not even for your income tax refund. They promised rapid   response and a congenial staff, all at interest rates of 25 percent or more.   After all, there is a price for having it all right now.   
               As the years passed I saw the onslaught of credit card companies offering   much the same, but at lower interest rates and with a revolving balance. Soon   credit cards were everywhere, even at school. It didn't matter if you had a job   or still lived at home with your folks. They wanted to "help you establish your   credit" so that you could be a free and independent adult.   
               I bought into the lie that I deserved to have it all, and to have it all   right now. It wasn't a hard lie to buy into, since prosperity was even being   preached in the church! The media demanded I take note—that I take charge of my   life and have all that I was entitled to. Everyone else seemed to be doing that   very thing, and I didn't want to be left out.   
               I took out my first loan at eighteen. Actually, I took out two loans—one for   a car and one from a finance company so that I could buy some clothes for my new   grown-up job. I quickly found out, however, that the very thing that was   supposed to set me free had instead taken me captive. I had to keep working in   order to make those monthly payments. I couldn't miss even a single payment or   my credit would be forever damaged. This new "liberty" kept me bound to jobs I   hated, forced me to live with other people in order to afford rent and   utilities, and reduced my life to merely existing from paycheck to paycheck.   
               The focus of our culture is that we deserve to have it all, and we deserve to   have it all right now. But it seems like no one ever wants to discuss the cost of such a mentality. And there are costs—high prices—to be paid for   living outside our means, allowing greed and envy to rule our lives, and   coveting what isn't ours.   
               When I married, I did so with debts. It wasn't something I wanted to take   with me into my new life, but I knew I had no choice; it was the price I was   paying for believing the lie that I could have it all without having to wait.   The sad truth, though, was that I didn't have it all. I really only had the   basic essentials, and even they were above my income level.   
               It wasn't long before my husband and I were trapped into getting another   credit card in order to buy food and gas, while we used our wages to pay off the   first credit card. This snowballed to the place where we suddenly owned half a   dozen credit cards, all of which carried heavy balances. We were out of control   to be sure, but hey, we deserved to have the things we needed, didn't we? The   media made sure we got this message, on a daily basis.   
               Then tragedy struck with full force. My husband's health failed him, and the   doctor told us he would need to stop working for a time. We hit the wall and   watched the pieces spill out around us. There we sat ... with more debt than we   could ever hope to pay back, a family to provide for, and our income cut in   half. There were few options for us, and the road looked pretty bleak. When this   happened, I learned I wasn't alone. Many of my friends were in the same boat,   for entirely different reasons. We were all facing bankruptcy. The lie had   failed us.   
               The Feeling of Entitlement
               Why are we so eager to believe the lie that   we deserve to have it all, and to have it all right now? Even in the Garden of   Eden this was part of the problem. Satan pitched the idea to Eve that God was   somehow keeping good things from her. Eve probably became convinced that   she was entitled to eat from the forbidden tree.               I sat with a group of women not long ago, and we discussed this very issue.   Our conversation went something like this:   
               "I saw everyone around me living better than we did," my friend Mary began.   "My friends were buying houses, new cars, and sending their kids to private   schools. I just knew we must be doing something wrong, because didn't we also   deserve to have those things?"   
               "Exactly," Kathy chimed in. "I felt that I was entitled to the good life my   parents had. I wanted to start where they left off. It seemed fair to me, but   what I didn't understand was how hard they had worked and sacrificed to get   where they were. They weren't in debt and had strict rules about saving money,   which was why they could afford to go on vacation or buy something new. They   never allowed themselves so much as a credit card, so there was no revolving   balance to pay off."   
               "But you can't get along without a credit card in this day and age," Samantha   added. "Try making a plane reservation or renting a car without one."   
               "True enough," I replied. "It seems the world has encouraged our love affair   with credit cards, but we aren't equipped with the wisdom and ability to handle   the situation."   
               "I was never encouraged to pay off my balance each month. I remember one   time," Mary said, "calling to make an early payoff on our car, and the bank   personnel went out of their way to convince me that I shouldn't spend my money   that way. After all, I'd paid so long on the car loan that now most of the money   was going to the principle and not the interest."   
               Hearing each of these women share basically the same story, I braved the   question: "How many of you have come to recognize the lie you bought into—the   lie that we deserve to have it all right now?"   
               "I think we all see that lie now," Samantha stated. The rest of them nodded.   
               "So what have you done to eliminate the lie and replace it with the truth?"   
               "It was hard to eliminate the lie," Kathy began. "My husband was definitely   into appearances, and this just fed my desire to start out where my parents left   off. He wanted a nice home with the latest model of everything, whether it was a   big-screen TV or a lawn mower, and he extended that desire to the kids and me as   well. He wanted me to dress in the best clothes and the kids to have the best   toys, games, and computers.   
               "When I explained to him that I felt we were out of control—that we were   barely making minimum payments due to our spending—he was not happy. To his way   of thinking, I'd somehow questioned his ability to provide. We fought like cats   and dogs for years on this issue. Finally one day I talked him into seeing a   financial planner for some life insurance choices. The planner took one look at   our debt and income and asked how in the world we were even making it from month   to month. I think that was the first time my husband truly saw the situation for   what it was."   
               "My husband blamed me," Mary said sadly. "And I suppose he was right to do   so. I controlled the checkbook and the credit cards. I would see something I   wanted and automatically start figuring in my mind how I could juggle things   around to pay for it. Of course, things never worked out on paper the way they   did in my mind, and by then it was too late. To eliminate the lie, I had to sit   down with my husband and come clean about everything. I asked him to take back   the credit cards, and to my surprise he ended up cutting them all up. He said if   we couldn't control ourselves with them, we'd control ourselves without them."   
               "For me," I shared, "recognition of the lie was simple enough. I knew that no   one really ‘deserved' anything, but I had convinced myself that I ‘needed' those   things. Eventually, I saw the lie in that too. I didn't need half of those   things! Being interested in history, I knew that many wealthy people were   self-made, so to speak. They had started with very little and had managed it   into a fortune. To eliminate the lie, I started studying up on how I could   manage what I had—not to make it into a fortune, but simply to eliminate the   heavy load of debt."   
               "Education is very helpful. You know, there are Christian counseling places   now," Kathy added. "They were able to help us. Otherwise, I think our marriage   might have fallen completely apart."   
               "Money issues are the number one reason people divorce," Samantha added. "But   I guess for me, the elimination of the lie came in accepting that it was okay   not to have the same thing that everyone else had. If I didn't have the money   saved up for a women's retreat or conference that I wanted to attend, I didn't   go. But the neat thing is that as I turned to the Lord for guidance in this, I   found He provided when things really mattered. I might not have been able to get   that cute pair of designer shoes, but I had good shoes that served the same   purpose."   
               "We're a label-minded culture," Mary said sadly. "I found myself avoiding   even things I really liked if it didn't have the right label."   
               "I think the important thing is that we turn to the Lord for help," Kathy   added. "Labels or no labels, counselors or no counselors, until we recognized   that we had a problem that only God could help us fix, we were just going in   circles. Self-control, after all, is evidence of the Holy Spirit at work in us.   
               "God wants us to be self-controlled. It doesn't mean we can't have nice   things. It doesn't mean we can't buy designer shoes. It simply means that we   stop worrying about what the world wants us to have, and focus instead on what   God wants us to have. I was blessed by Philippians 4:19. It says, ‘My God will   meet all your needs according to his glorious riches in Christ Jesus.' If God   was going to meet and provide for my needs, why was I worried about anything?"   
               Mary leaned forward. "I think the verse that helped me eliminate the lie was   the one from the Ten Commandments that talks about not coveting anything of your   neighbor's. I was bad about this. I saw things that other people had, and I   wanted them. God had to help me see that my motivation was completely based on   envy and greed."
               How Did We Get Here?              
               Very few people can have whatever they want by   simply pulling cash out of their pocket. For most Americans there are a variety   of loans to be had—through credit cards, finance companies, banks, or personal   loans. Seldom is being in debt given a second thought. It's considered to be one   of those unavoidable circumstances. Yet in my grandmother's generation, having   debt was considered shameful, and in times long before my grandmother was born   accusing someone of having debts was an insult. Most people simply did not have   debts. So what happened to us?
               Following World War II, our country underwent a great many changes. While   buying on credit had existed prior to this time, the practice really began to   flourish when the flood of soldiers returned home. They were anxious to put   their lives back together in a hurry, and everyone else was happy to help them   do so. The GI Bill enabled them to purchase a home more easily and even provided   loans for college tuition.   
               After enduring the rations and restrictions of wartime, the country was ready   to see prosperity thrive. There were encouragements to set up accounts with   prominent department stores that would allow consumers to purchase materials on time. It was a fascinating concept for many who had never considered   carrying a debt, even with a family member.   
               The demand for automobiles grew as American families began to see them as a   "necessity"—a necessity that had to be paid for over time in most cases. And as   radio was replaced by the wonder of television, first in black and white and   later in color, we were able to see all of the products and goods that we   were told we needed, which created an even greater desire for them. As a nation   we had opened a Pandora's box of credit, and our lives would never be the same.
               God is Our Supply As my friends and I talked about our problems with   indebtedness that day, we came to see that each of us had our own reasons for   why we'd bought into the lie, and we had our own individual strategies for how   to overcome it. But there was one thing that we could all agree on: Replacing   the lie with truth would only come through an understanding that God wants to   supply our needs. He doesn't want us, as His children, to rely on the world   for our comfort. He longs for us to come to Him, trusting that He will meet our   every need.               Psalm 37:4 says, "Delight yourself in the Lord and he will give you the   desires of your heart." I think a lot of times we take this verse as a kind of   vending machine promise. We say to ourselves, "If I'm happy in the Lord, He's   going to give me everything I ask for." But I see this verse differently. If we   delight ourselves in God—if He alone is the one we seek and we find our joy in   Him—then the desires that are in our hearts will be His desires. Our   motivations, desires, and goals will flow from our relationship with Him.   
               Another verse I often hear taken as a pledge of prosperity is Jeremiah 29:11:   "‘For I know the plans I have for you,' declares the Lord, ‘plans to prosper you   and not to harm you.'"   
               But what about the harm we cause ourselves? God didn't force me to overspend   on my credit card. God didn't give me the driving desire to have the things I   saw my friends possess. I did myself harm by believing the world when I should   have been turning to my heavenly Father for advice.   
               God wants to prosper us—but that can take many forms. We can prosper   spiritually, physically, mentally, or emotionally. We can prosper by having a   family or by getting a new job or a new ministry, but we can also prosper by   learning patience or acquiring more friends.   
               Please don't misunderstand me. I know that God is able to give us in   abundance whatever He chooses. I know that every good and perfect gift comes   from Him, just as the Word says (James 1:17). But I also know that the single   mom living in poverty with her children is just as loved by the Lord as the   wealthy woman sitting in a mansion. I worry that we've become respecters of   persons (James 2:9) in our worldly focus on prosperity—that we are guilty of   seeing the rich man as worthy of our company, while relegating the poor out of   our sight because we think they don't have faith or they have sin in their   lives.   
               Proverbs 3:1–2 tells us, "My son, do not forget my teaching, but keep my   commands in your heart, for they will prolong your life many years and bring you   prosperity." By keeping God's commands, we prolong our lives and ensure   ourselves prosperity. It may not be the kind of prosperity we expect, but we   will prosper.
               Seeking God First Is the Key              
               The sixth chapter of Matthew is full of   wisdom regarding this issue of having it all now. Here Jesus tells us, "Do not   store up for yourselves treasures on earth, where moth and rust destroy, and   where thieves break in and steal. 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" (vv.   19–20). By drawing closer to God and serving Him, we secure heavenly, lasting   treasure.
               Jesus tells us later in that same chapter that we shouldn't worry about our   lives—about what we'll eat or drink, or what we'll wear. He reminds us that God   knows what we need, then adds, "But seek first his kingdom and his   righteousness, and all these things will be given to you as well" (v. 33). Seek   God first. This is the best way to replace the lie I deserve to have it all,   and to have it all right now.   
               By seeking God first, our hearts will change, and in turn our desires will   change. We'll suddenly realize that we don't "need" a new this or that. We can   be content with exactly what we have. Financial wealth and worldly goods will   take on less importance because we have something far better—the peace that   transcends all understanding (Philippians 4:7). Instead of putting our trust in   the world and what it can offer, we find our security in the faithfulness of   God.   
               Having money, property, possessions, and the ability to do many of the things   we desire isn't sinful or wrong in itself. But when those things begin to   control us because we have bought into the lie, then we must acknowledge that we   have a problem and turn to the Lord for help. He is the only one who can set us   free.   
               Thinking It Through: Personal Application 
               1. What are some ways you've bought into this lie?   
               2. How can you eliminate this lie in your life, especially when the world   pushes for you to believe it?   
               3. Do you have a budget? A savings account? A plan for getting out of debt?   If not, what is a first step you could take to improve your financial situation?     
               4. Which of the following verses in the Bible can help you overcome the   "need" to have it all ... right now? 1 Timothy 6:6–11; Proverbs 15:16; Hebrews   13:5–6; 1 Timothy 6:17. If one speaks to you in a special way, write it out and   post it on your mirror.   
               5. If you struggle in this area, what kind of support group can you put   together to help you overcome the lie? (Friends? Family? Financial planners?   Counselors?)   
               My Turn 
               Allison: How well I can relate to this lie! For me, the "all" was having a man, a   home, being thin and looking great, and appearing for all the world to be one   big happy family. In other words, I was into creating the ultimate fairy tale.   The fact that creating this fallacy often cost a great deal of money was   something I frequently overlooked.   
               For years I truly believed that "money grows on trees." But eventually I had   to face the music and seek ways to overcome this deceptive lie. In my case, I   found it helpful to weigh the financial costs of something against the spiritual   cost. As I sought wisdom and guidance from the Lord, looking to His Word for   answers, I began to make better choices that were based in God's truth, not the   empty promises of the world. It's an ongoing struggle. We have to be on guard   all the time. But it sure gets easier the more times you turn toward God and   away from the lie that you deserve to have it all ... right now.
               Q&A With Allison Bottke, one of the authors of I Can't Do It All
              
               
 Excerpted fromI Can't Do It All by Tracie   Peterson, Allison Bottke, & Dianne O'Brian , 
Copyright © 2006; ISBN   0764200666. 
Published by Bethany House   Publishers. 
Used by permission. Unauthorized duplication   prohibited.     
 
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