Hallelujah for happiness
In
some Christian denominations, as well as in some other religions, the more the
devotees suffer and the sadder they are, the more religious they are considered
to be. But for the born-again Christian,
it’s supposed to be just the opposite! One measure of Christians’ spirituality
or religiosity is whether they’re truly happy, both inwardly and outwardly.
God
hasn’t made religion difficult and grievous, and Jesus certainly didn’t make it
that way. That’s always been the fault of religious leaders and teachers who
changed things and interpreted things to suit themselves, to exalt themselves
and to try to get a tighter control on the people—who, as Jesus said, “bind
heavy burdens, hard to bear, and lay them on men’s shoulders; but they
themselves will not move them with one of their fingers” (Matthew 23:4).
I
don’t see how any people are ever going to be truly happy without the Lord.
Even if they have all of their physical needs supplied, they have to have
something to satisfy their spiritual needs and their hunger for happiness.
Thank God that’s what we have in Jesus!
I
enjoy everything God has given, and I’m very happy! Even our work makes us
happy—if it’s work that we know is doing some good and helping people. Our
religion makes us happy, our work makes us happy, our play makes us happy, and
we have very little that makes us unhappy, except the fact that some other
people are not happy.
Sometimes
I wonder if I made the right decision or did the right thing, which concerns me
and causes me for a little while to not be as happy as I should be. But I
always come out of the woods afterwards to find out that the Lord helped
everything work out for the best and I shouldn’t have worried after all (Romans
8:28).
And
we are sometimes sick, of course. That may not make us feel very happy for a
while, but even that doesn’t destroy our total happiness. Our physical
condition may leave a little something to be desired—health and strength—but it
doesn’t make us all that unhappy. We can still be very happy in spirit and
mentally.
When
I see people who aren’t happy, I always figure there must be something wrong
with their religion. That’s why we should take every opportunity we get to urge
others to enjoy the same happiness that we have. If they haven’t got it and
they see that we do, they’re going to wonder what the difference is, and
they’re going to want it too—and the difference, of course, is Jesus!
So, hallelujah for happiness! Thank God for a
happy religion and a happy life! Thank the Lord for being able to enjoy all the
physical pleasures He gives us, as well as the spiritual pleasures. We’ve got
everything! The only thing I can think of that I want is for other people to be
as happy as I am. That’s the only real longing or need that I have—the desire
to help others understand all that Jesus has to offer, and to help make them
happy.
Thank
God for happiness and enjoyment of life, our religion, and the Lord! As I often
sing:
Happy
now, happy now,
Since
I found the favor of my loving Savior.
All
the past, gone at last,
And
I don’t care when or how, praise God!
I’m
happy now, happy now,
I
have lasting joy!
Oh,
the Devil’s deserted,
And
I am converted,
And
I’m happy, happy, happy, happy now! ■
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