Evaluation
Overall Score: 8.7/10
A warm, searching book that presses truth into the heart. It repays unhurried meditation, and it is best taken in small portions.
Summary
At a Glance
- Length
- 152 pages
- Type
- Devotional
- Theo. Perspective
- Reformed
- Overall score
- 8.7 / 10
We live in a restless age, and even believers can confuse contentment with lowered expectations or emotional numbness.
Burroughs teaches contentment as a learned grace, a quiet strength of soul that rests in the Father’s wise providence without denying real sorrow.
Why Should We Read This Resource?
This book diagnoses complaining with unusual precision. Burroughs exposes the subtle pride beneath murmuring, then directs the heart to the sovereignty, goodness, and fatherly care of God.
It is especially helpful for pastoral ministry because it gives categories for counselling, how to speak to those crushed by disappointment, and how to correct those who demand their own way. The counsel is firm, yet it aims at healing.
For preaching, the applications are plentiful. Burroughs shows how the gospel trains us to receive Christ as enough, and to interpret hard circumstances through the promises of God rather than through fear.
Closing Recommendation
We strongly recommend it for pastors and leaders, and for any believer learning to endure with faith, patience, and quiet joy.
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