Quotes about Contentment
Success is getting what you want. Happiness is wanting what you get.[Eddie Scissons]
- WP Kinsella
Human sympathy has its limits, and we were contented to let all their tragic arguments fade with the city lights behind.
- F Scott Fitzgerald
He is rich or poor according to what he is, not according to what he has.
- Henry Ward Beecher
They want to claim, want to take, and want to get, and yet what they crave eludes their grasp. Why? Because they do not wait for God to give it.
- Andrew Murray
And there they were, empty, ignorant, helpless, glad, and joyful, but deeply humbled.
- Andrew Murray
Blessed is the man who has made that "I have nothing" the motto of his ministry.
- Andrew Murray
The rest is in Christ, and not something He gives apart from Himself, and so it is only in having Him that the rest can really be kept and enjoyed.
- Andrew Murray
The humble man feels no jealousy or envy. He can praise God when others are preferred and blessed before him. He can bear to hear others praised and himself forgotten, because in God's presence he has learned to say with Paul, I am nothing.
- Andrew Murray
It is wonderful how glorious that life of faith becomes for him who is content to have nothing, or feel nothing, in himself, and always to live on the power of his Lord.
- Andrew Murray
To be happy at home is the ultimate result of all ambition, the end to which every enterprise and labour tends, and of which every desire prompts the prosecution.
- Samuel Johnson
Whoever thou art that, not content with a moderate condition, imaginest happiness in royal magnificence, and dreamest that command or riches can feed the appetite of novelty with perpetual gratifications, survey the Pyramids, and confess thy folly!
- Samuel Johnson
Every man is rich or poor according to the proportion between his desires and his enjoyments; any enlargement of wishes is therefore equally destructive to happiness with the diminution of possession, and he that teaches another to long for what he never shall obtain is no less an enemy to his quiet than if he had robbed him of part of his patrimony.
- Samuel Johnson