(new article tomorrow)
The Bible teaches there is a big difference between human happiness and godly joy. What gave Paul the ability to live in whatever circumstances and have joy was from not evaluating life the way human viewpoint does, on the basis of simple happiness.
Human happiness is about meeting personal expectations and having circumstances match desires, explains Preacher Richard Jordan. It means I’m happy when life and others respond the way I want them to, or expect them to respond.
God’s purpose in your life has nothing to do with making you happy. People say, "Well, certainly God wants me to be happy." If God’s goal was to make/keep you happy, then suffering wouldn’t have any real purpose in your life. In fact, it would be completely counterproductive.
Real joy is about meeting God’s expectations, not yours, and having done God’s will. God’s purpose is to use me to bring glory to His name, and in every circumstance of my life that’s my purpose, my privilege. I don’t need to look at circumstances and evaluate whether this is a place I can rejoice or not.Glory is an outward expression. Rejoicing is an inner attitude. So the inner attitude of joy results in me being able to express that outward demonstration of that joy in times of trouble, difficulty and pressure, or persecution.
It isn’t enough just to say "tribulation works patience"; it’s KNOWING that it does that causes us to be able to have the glory—the outward expression of this joy in the midst of trouble.
All of your joy is eventually going to have to be based in who God has made you and what He’s going to do with you in Christ. Every time in Paul’s epistles when you see the issue of hope, it’s always looking to the future. It’s a Rapture-resurrection kind of a look.
Always talking to God about what His word says about the circumstances I’m in gives me the ability to continually endure through the trouble because I’ve got a hope out there in the end that fills my heart with rejoicing. My joy is going to come from the sufficiency of His grace."
[10] Who delivered us from so great a death, and doth deliver: in whom we trust that he will yet deliver us.’
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