| In the mid-1970s, I served as a pastor
                  on a church staff for several years. The 
                experience was a milestone for me. The senior pastor and congregation were highly
                  supportive to me, and I grew in many 
                important ways. Yet I was often frustrated by the nature of pastoral work 
                  itself. Pastors are expected to be generalists--wearing many 
                  hats and responding to many emergencies. Many pastors thrive 
                  on this multifaceted aspect of church work and love the 
                  adventure of countless responsibilities, and I’m 
                  grateful for their natural devotion to this vital role. I found myself wanting to concentrate more on 
                  certain areas of ministry that utilized my gifts, and was 
                  often discouraged at how little time I had for these 
                  activities. The experience brought me face to face with the 
                  fact that, while I greatly enjoy challenging work, I prefer to 
                  focus on a few things and do them well. That insight was invaluable, and it led me to begin an
                  independent ministry. 
                My work since then as a "resource pastor," with its focus on teaching and writing,
                  has fit me 
                amazingly well, and I’ve never regretted making this change. Yet 
                I can’t imagine I would have found the insight to do it, nor the 
                motivation, had I not experienced some significant frustration 
                as a pastor, which convinced me I was trying too hard to fit 
                myself into an unnatural role. God, I believe, used the 
                unwelcome aspects of pastoral work as much as the enjoyable ones
                  to clarify this new direction I should take. This positive role of frustration in my 
                decision to launch Nehemiah Ministries is a good example of what 
                human potential writer W. Clement Stone terms “inspirational 
                dissatisfaction.” Stone presents this concept in The Success 
                System That Never Fails, which I read about ten years ago.* 
                This book, ironically, had sat on my shelf ignored for more than 
                thirty years, and it would have helped me if I had read
                it when I was a pastor. Someone gave it to me in the late 1960s--so long ago that 
                I can’t remember who, nor whether it was a gift or a loan 
                (undoubtedly the latter). I shied away from reading it all that
                time due to its title, which seemed audacious. Then one afternoon in the summer of 2000, I had some free 
                time and wanted to read something upbeat. I decided to give 
                Stone’s book a chance. It was, well, better than I expected. I 
                found his notion of inspirational dissatisfaction, which he 
                discusses throughout the book, remarkably helpful, and I 
                marveled that I’d never encountered it before. Inspirational dissatisfaction, as Stone uses the term, is the 
                positive role that our experiences of frustration play--both in 
                helping us understand important steps we should take with our 
                life, and in finding the motivation to take them. We may be 
                unhappy in our job, for instance, because the work doesn’t fit 
                us well, or because coworkers are not supportive or have 
                unreasonable expectations of us. Frustration can be our ally in 
                such cases--a red-alert that we need to seek a change. I love this concept, as simple as it is, for it provides us a 
                basis for seeing a silver lining in adverse circumstances, which 
                we can easily miss. Some Christians view all frustrating 
                situations fatalistically and hopelessly. They assume that God 
                is punishing them through these circumstances and that they 
                shouldn’t strive to change them. On a more healthy level, we may recognize how such situations
                help us grow, but we assume the silver lining comes only if we stay in them and allow God to 
                stretch us there. That conclusion  is often justified, and we can 
                be too quick to run away from challenges, to say the least. Yet 
                Scripture gives about equal weight to the other 
                possibility--that God may use our frustration in such cases to 
                enlighten us to the fact that we’re not where we should be. 
                Healthy thinking requires that we give fair consideration to 
                both possibilities, and feel permission to think in both 
                directions. Unfortunately, our Christian teaching usually gives far more 
                attention to the former possibility than the latter. We also 
                have elaborate vocabulary for talking about the one (“pick up 
                your cross,” “accept your lot,” “be a living sacrifice,” “lose 
                your life in order to find it”), and little in the way of 
                convenient language to speak of the possibility that an 
                unwelcome situation simply isn’t right for us. "Inspirational dissatisfaction" fills this gap wonderfully well 
                and can make a redemptive contribution to our Christian 
                vocabulary. We shouldn’t underestimate the role that language 
                plays in our ability to reason effectively and make sound 
                decisions, given the extraordinary level of “self-talk” that
                we 
                engage in constantly. I agonized over the question of whether to 
                leave conventional church work for a specialized ministry far 
                more than I should have, due especially to guilt-ridden 
                self-talk. Simply knowing it was permissible to think in 
                terms of inspirational dissatisfaction, and having that term 
                available, would have made a big difference. Turning Failure into Success Stone notes another way in which inspirational 
                dissatisfaction can function to our benefit. The discontent we 
                feel over our own poor performance or behavior in some area can 
                provide potent motivation to improve. Here again I find the 
                concept helpful. Our tendency, when we’re disappointed with 
                ourselves, is to beat ourselves up and grow even more 
                discouraged. Yet this discontent can provide the most 
                powerful incentive we ever experience for positive change. The most important turning point of my teenage years occurred 
                when, one afternoon, alone in my father’s home office, I 
                suddenly felt such disgust over my poor performance in high 
                school that I resolved to do better from that point forward. 
                Surprisingly, that resolution stuck, and I worked hard at my 
                coursework for the rest of my senior year, then throughout 
                college and two graduate programs. The reason this resolution 
                was so effective, while many others I had made failed, was due, 
                I’m certain, to the degree of frustration I felt with 
                myself at the time that I made it. It’s in this sense that psychologists often talk about the 
                value of “hitting bottom” as a stimulus for change. Our 
                discouragement doesn’t have to reach this level to 
                provide useful inspirational dissatisfaction. It can happen 
                anytime we’re disappointed with ourselves, if we’re open to the 
                possibility. Simply being aware of how frustration with 
                ourselves can inspire positive change--and having a term for 
                this dynamic--greatly enhances our ability to think 
                optimistically. We’re less likely to condemn ourselves for past 
                mistakes and more likely to draw benefits from them. Instead of wallowing in discouragement over how a thoughtless 
                remark I made may have hurt someone, for instance, I can find 
                the incentive to learn from the episode how to avoid such 
                impulsive speaking in the future. I’m more likely to find the 
                heart to apologize to this person as well. Inspirational Dissatisfaction in Scripture It’s in weighing the significance of our frustration in 
                unwelcome situations where we’re likely to find the concept of 
                inspirational dissatisfaction helpful most often, though, for 
                our confusion over God’s will is often greatest then. It’s 
                important to know that our discontent is sometimes his signal to 
                seek a change. When we look for it in Scripture, we find many 
                examples where this was the case. One involves some disciples of Elisha, who find that their 
                work and living conditions are too confining (2 Kings 6:1-7). They 
                explain to him, “Look, the place where we meet with you is too 
                small for us. Let us go to the Jordan, where each of us can get 
                a pole; and let us build a place there for us to live.” Elisha responds to them, “Go.” They press him further, “Won’t you please come with your 
                servants,” and he replies, “I will,” and goes with them. What’s reassuring about this incident is that Elisha 
                validates the frustration his disciples feel. He doesn’t 
                imply that they’re selfish for feeling it, nor suggest that they 
                should simply learn to live with their cramped quarters and make 
                the best of them. Instead, he agrees to help them make a 
                constructive change. The passage is refreshing to consider in any circumstance of 
                life--such as a job, living situation, or ministry--where we’re frustrated over factors that work against 
                our using our gifts effectively. We’re shown that God may be 
                alerting us through our frustration to seek improvements or even 
                a new venue. We’re freed from our natural tendency to think that 
                the Christian response must be solely to accept our lot, and 
                we’re given permission--even encouraged--to weigh other 
                possibilities. Another biblical example of inspirational dissatisfaction 
                involves Abraham’s inability to find a wife for Isaac among the 
                women of Cana (Gen 24). Both he and Isaac were likely frustrated 
                over this situation and had long been so. Abraham, especially, had strong reason to think they should 
                simply accept reality in this case and not try to change it. His 
                uncanny experience of miracles gave him a reason to be passive. 
                Isaac’s birth in itself, when Abraham and Sarah were both very 
                old, was testimony--and Isaac’s life a constant reminder--that 
                God could solve the most impossible problems supernaturally. 
                Shouldn’t Abraham assume that, if God wanted Isaac married, God 
                would provide a spouse for his son without special effort on 
                Abraham’s part? Yet in this case Abraham was spurred by his frustration to 
                take initiative to solve the problem. He sent his servant to his 
                hometown of Haran to search for a wife for Isaac. Abraham 
                clearly believed he was honoring God and had his blessing in 
                taking this step, for he spoke to his servant of the help God’s 
                angel would provide in the journey. The mission was successful. 
                The servant returned with Rebecca, who became Isaac’s wife, and, 
                from all indications in Scripture, was an exemplary match for 
                him. This passage is deeply encouraging to consider if you want to 
                be married but believe that factors in your life are hindering 
                you from finding someone compatible. You may be in a job setting where the likelihood of meeting someone is poor, or in a 
                church or fellowship where you’ve been stigmatized as a 
                “perpetual single.” Traditional Christian counsel is, don’t try 
                to change these situations but trust that if God wants you 
                married, he’ll make it happen in spite of the limits of your circumstances. If no one suitable comes along, assume that God 
                wants you to stay single, and pray that he will take away your 
                desire for marriage. Abraham’s example presents a different model. It shows that 
                taking initiative to change your circumstances in such cases can 
                be highly appropriate and honoring to Christ. And it suggests 
                that God may be prompting you through your frustration to leave 
                certain situations and look for ones that improve your 
                prospects for finding a spouse. Getting the Signals Straight Simply knowing it’s okay to consider the possibility that God 
                is moving us through our frustration to leave or change an 
                unwelcome situation is encouraging in itself. The concept of 
                inspirational dissatisfaction is greatly reassuring. It deepens 
                our alertness to a potential source of God’s guidance, and 
                increases the possibility that we’ll recognize action he wants 
                us to take to solve problems. It doesn’t answer all the questions, though. We still have 
                the challenge of determining God’s will for us in a given 
                instance. How can we know with confidence whether God wants us 
                to leave a frustrating situation or stay? When does he want us 
                to take initiative to change our circumstances, and when does he 
                wish to change us so that we can learn to handle them better? 
                Here are some steps that can help us reach the right conclusion. 1. Give each situation a fair chance. Every 
                job, educational program, relationship, fellowship 
                situation--you name it--has plenty of dry periods. We must be 
                careful not to think that God is prompting us through the first 
                sign of disenchantment to look for greener pastures. Some 
                situations--degree programs especially--require plodding through 
                much uninspiring time in order to reap the long-range benefits. 
                I came close to bailing out of my doctoral program about halfway 
                through but am forever grateful that an insightful counselor persuaded me to 
                stick with it. Be certain you’ve given a situation a reasonable 
                opportunity to prove itself before considering the possibility 
                of leaving. 2. Take your temperament into account. It’s 
                particularly important to understand our own temperament in 
                weighing questions of God’s guidance. What is your track record 
                for sticking with challenges? Do you tend to quit too easily? Do 
                you instinctively fear commitment or feel anxious after 
                committing to situations that at first you were convinced you 
                needed and would enjoy? If so, you should be slow to read your 
                uneasiness as guidance from God to move on. Be a good life-coach 
                to yourself, and require that you stay committed to the 
                challenging situation long enough that you can say you’ve given 
                it a reasonable chance, before considering other options. You may be at the other extreme. You stay in situations that 
                are unpleasant or unfruitful well beyond a reasonable point, 
                perhaps out of stubbornness, perhaps because you feel guilty 
                about leaving. You need to err on the side of “cutting yourself 
                some rope.” Go overboard a bit in considering inspirational 
                dissatisfaction as a possibility, and in allowing yourself the 
                freedom to act on it. For you, the concept can be an especially 
                liberating one. 3. Understand why you feel uncomfortable. We 
                may feel uneasy in certain situations due to anxiety problems we 
                can overcome. We may be edgy about commitment itself. Two other 
                common apprehensions, reaching phobic levels for many, are the 
                fear of public speaking and the fear of air travel--and many 
                jobs require both. The good news is that these fears can be 
                conquered, and help in doing so is widely available. If our 
                discomfort in a job or any circumstance stems from an 
                unreasonable fear, we shouldn’t bail out but ought to confront 
                our anxiety and get the best help available in dealing with it. 
                We shouldn’t let our fear be a basis for turning away from an 
                opportunity that otherwise fits us well. Our discomfort, on the other hand, may result from the fact 
                that a situation doesn’t match us well. If we’re being treated 
                unkindly, our gifts aren’t being respected, or others are 
                constantly laying unreasonable expectations on us, we have good 
                reason to consider new options. Our frustration in such cases 
                may be the Lord’s wake-up call to move on. 4. Weigh your positive alternatives. At the 
                same time, it’s important to consider not only what we’re 
                reacting against, but what positive options are available to us. 
                We can be tempted to leave an imperfect situation out of 
                restlessness or a grass-is-greener mentality, when in fact we 
                don’t have something better to take its place. There are some 
                instances-- abusive situations especially--when we should bail 
                out anyway. Yet in many cases it’s better not to leave unless we 
                have a clear idea of where we’re going. The point is strategically important in employment 
                situations, for we’re usually in the best position to “market” 
                ourselves for a new job while we’re still employed. A good test 
                of whether the Lord may be prompting us to quit a job that we 
                dislike is whether we have a better opportunity available. There 
                are exceptions. We might leave in order to take some intentional 
                time off to re-assess our life’s direction, or to move to a 
                region where our options are better, or to get further training 
                that will improve our future prospects. The important thing is 
                to have a clear strategy in mind that provides us with a 
                positive alternative. It can be a good litmus test in other frustrating situations 
                not to opt out until we know for certain where we’re opting in. 
                Responding is generally a more trustworthy impulse than 
                reacting. 5. Don’t minimize the value of prayer and others’ 
                counsel. The time-worn principles forever apply. Praying 
                earnestly for God’s guidance and for openness to his will helps 
                us in many ways--giving us clearer thinking, greater alertness 
                to indications of his leading and a more natural inclination to 
                do his will. Prayer is especially important when it comes to 
                weighing the significance of our frustration, and can help us 
                considerably in reaching the right conclusions about it. “Is any 
                one among you suffering? Let him pray,” James counsels (Jas 5:13 
                RSV). While James obviously means we should pray for relief in 
                an adverse situation, he certainly means we should ask for 
                wisdom about what to do as well. He also assures us that such 
                praying brings us great benefit: “If any of you lacks wisdom, 
                let him ask God, who gives to all men generously and without 
                reproaching, and it will be given him” (Jas 1:5 RSV). Others’ counsel is nearly as important in the biblical view. 
                Throughout Scripture we often see God using the insightful 
                counsel of one person to clarify the thinking of another (Prov 
                27:17). I can only imagine the relief Timothy must have felt 
                when Paul consoled him, “Do not let anyone look down on you 
                because you are young” (1 Tim 4:12). Timothy was experiencing 
                age discrimination; because of his youth, others weren’t 
                supporting him as fully as they should have in his pastoral 
                role. Paul assured him that he shouldn’t view this uncomfortable 
                situation as simply a cross to bear but should take steps to 
                correct it! In other cases, Paul challenged Timothy to work on changing 
                himself in order to accommodate the challenges of his work. 
                “Rekindle the gift of God that is within you,” Paul exhorted him 
                on one occasion (1 Tim 4:14), on another telling him, “Do not 
                neglect the gift you have” (2 Tim 1:6 both RSV). In the same way, God will use others’ counsel to help us sort 
                through both sides of the inspirational dissatisfaction issue 
                and to decide whether we should seek to change our circumstances 
                or change ourselves. We ought to draw especially on the counsel 
                of those who see our life dynamically and desire God’s very best 
                for us. Seeing the Bigger Picture The best news in what we’re saying is that the most 
                challenging situations we experience--those where we may be 
                tempted to think that God’s hand has turned against us--can be 
                settings where we gain treasured insight into our potential and 
                God’s will for us, and where we gain motivation for change that 
                may not come any other way. Realizing that our frustration can 
                generate such inspiration and enlightenment strengthens our 
                confidence that God has good purposes for us in unwelcome 
                situations, and it deepens our hope that he has better things 
                for us in the future. And it helps us find the courage to take 
                important steps of faith. Having a term to describe it really does 
                help. The next time you’re tempted to think that life has dealt 
                you a rotten hand in some area, try thinking in terms of 
                inspirational dissatisfaction, and see if doing so makes a 
                difference. |