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| Copyright © 2003 by The Voice of Prophecy |
| David B. Smith |
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P.O.
Box 53055 |
| December 4, 2003 |
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MADE FOR JOY #4
TURN OFF THAT HAPPY MUSIC! There was a cartoon in a Christian magazine not too long ago, where a devout woman is introducing her wayward spouse to the church pastor on Sunday morning. “Reverend, I’d like for you to meet my husband,” she announced. But he’s not the most willing worshiper in town, because the cartoon shows her dragging her husband by the ankles to the front door of the church, and he’s left long skid marks across the lawn where he dug in with both hands, trying to prevent this stained-glass encounter. Apparently this reluctant warrior wasn’t being invited to the same church King David attended, because the Psalmist was once heard to say with enthusiasm: “I was glad when they said unto me, ‘Let us go into the house of the Lord.’” This has been an interesting week of study for us here on the Voice of Prophecy, because our title is this: MADE FOR JOY. Are we really creatures designed for delight and hard-wired for happiness? Is the promise of Jesus really true, where He tells His followers: “Ask and you will receive, and your joy will be complete”? We have a collection here in our office of spiritual soundbites; it’s entitled Quotes For the Journey; Wisdom For the Way, compiled by Gordon S. Jackson and published by NavPress. And friend, if you’re a Christian today as you hear these words, it’s striking how you and I truly do have a moral obligation, really, to live up to the concept that God’s people were MADE to be joy-filled. Notice this, from Leon Bly: “Joy is the most infallible sign of the presence of God.” Or this from G. K. Chesterton: Here’s a “joy quote” that is almost staggering: What do you think of that? I have to look into my own
life and realize that if I am not living as a joyous Christian, then I’m
not fully understanding the message of the faith. I’m not experiencing
grace as completely as Jesus wants me to. Because if the presence of God
is in my life, if I have accepted that Calvary is real, and that eternal
life is mine, and that Jesus has forgiven my sins . . . I’m going to be
full of joy. And my life will be a witness to that reality. “[A Christian society] is to be a cheerful society: full of singing and rejoicing, and regarding worry or anxiety as wrong. Courtesy is one of the Christian virtues; and the New Testament hates what it calls ‘busybodies.’” Let me ask you today — those of you who are currently
practicing Christians: do you bring cheerfulness and joy into the church
with you every Sabbath or Sunday morning? Do you deliberately decide,
as you seek the Lord’s help in this, that you will participate happily
in the music, the Bible lesson study, the giving, the sermon time, even
the ticky-tack details that fill up the worship hour? And then, during
the week to come, are you actively involved in making your congregation
a “cheerful society,” as C. S. Lewis puts it? “Before we can become highly contagious Christians, we must first live in a way that convinces the people around us that we actually have the disease ourselves!” When you pause and think about it, the successful practicing of daily Christianity should always do two things: bring joy to the practitioner, and radiate joy to all those who are around. We see this demonstrated in the lives of the 72 followers Jesus commissioned to go out, two by two, to spread the Gospel, the good news. And you know, it worked! Their journeys were successful! They did what Jesus commanded, and it was a positive experience. These first missionaries came back to Him, smiles bathing their faces, and notice how they checked in with their reports: “The seventy-two returned WITH JOY and said, ‘Lord, even the demons submit to us in Your name.’” I mentioned King David, who writes about his love of worship. The heavenly principle of forgiveness, of a clean slate, was also a source of joy for him; remember how he wrote in his great confession prayer found in Psalm 51? “Restore to me the JOY of Your salvation”? In the book of Acts we can read how the early Christian church spent some serious time in prayer, entreating heaven for the promised gift of the Holy Spirit. Again, here are two vital ingredients for the faithful: prayer and seeking the Holy Spirit. And what was the result? You can read it in Acts 13:52: “And the disciples were filled with joy AND with the Holy Spirit.” And of course, all believers today should have engraved in their minds the beautiful “List of Nine” — the beloved “Fruits of the Spirit.” Notice one that ranks high on the list: “But the fruit of the Spirit is love, JOY, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness and self-control.” So we find woven through all the pages of the Bible,
and throughout the history of the Christian Church, that joy is to be
the foundation of our lives. Let me say again, friend: we were MADE to
be joyful. We were designed, not with a gas tank, but with a joy tank.
The only thing that can keep that tank full and the engine running smoothly
. . . is God. And it’s our challenge to find that joy, to live that joy,
and to make that joy evident on our faces and in our lifestyles. To show,
as the disciples did, that, hey, this stuff works! “I know,” he once said, “that God has bestowed a talent upon me, and I thank Him for it. I think I have done my duty and have been of use in my generation and by my works. Let others do the same.” So when the criticisms came in from all quarters, the response Haydn gave is most interesting. Because here was a talented composer who had experienced a personal encounter with heaven. He had met with God. He had discovered that human beings made in God’s image were made for joy. And this is the answer he gave to his critics: “When I think of God, my heart is so filled with joy that the notes fly off as from a spindle.” A young man named Amadeus — better known, perhaps, as Mozart — was also touched by the joy of this older composer’s music. He once paid this tribute, which would be well-said of any Christian believer: “He alone has the secret of making me smile, and touching me to the bottom of my soul.” |
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