Bible Men: Joshua: Enjoying God
Then ye shall return unto the land of your
possession, and enjoy it. Jos 1:15
Joy
and Guilt
In the field of joy it’s hard to please everybody.
It is even harder to please fellow Christians.
To one group God is holy and should be enjoyed
holily. To the other God cannot be enjoyed as if one was in mourning. Joy
should radiate not only from the face but from the whole body. Every muscle,
every pore and arm should redound to the glory of God. So hands shoot in the
air, voices ring, and the sanctuary shakes.
But the other group frowns. God is not manic. God is
orderly and not chaotic. Worship is solemn. But the second group counters that
there is no spirit in that form of worship. And “where the Spirit of the Lord
is, there’s liberty,” they affirm.
But Christians still disagree over many things. Dancing
especially has never been comfortable with the church. It was never comfortable
with David’s wife Michal either. She thought it was disgusting and not right
for a king to dance like common people. But David enjoyed it. And God censored
Michal and not David.
So what exactly is enjoying God and what is
appropriate? And if it is wrong before the eyes of men is it wrong before the
eyes of God also?
Faith
and Works
There was a time I equated holiness with being
serious minded at all times also. Being too happy made me uneasy.
I thought it displeased God. I was a works minded
believer. And so I was sad. And so I was angry also. I hated everybody who didn’t
look serious!
Did Martin Luther not feel something like that
before he became reformed? “The just shall live by faith” so I discovered the
gem in God’s word too, and it set me free!
There is therefore
now no condemnation to them which are in Christ Jesus, who walk not after the
flesh, but after the Spirit. Rom 8:1
There is no fear in love; but perfect love casteth out fear: because
fear hath torment. He that feareth is not made perfect in love. 1Jn
4:18
That change was revolutionary. In one fell swoop my
eyes were opened and now I could see – “and your joy no man taketh from you”!
The fact of hell can easily instill morbid fear
especially in the introverted types, so that the line between godly fear and
demonic one becomes very thin indeed.
Satan can use the threat of hell to terrorize the
heart of a weak believer, plunging one into a life of perpetual sorrow and
joyless rigidity. “For if our
heart condemn us, God is greater than our heart, and knoweth all
things. Beloved, if our heart condemn us not, then have we
confidence toward God” (1Jn 3:20-21).
And if you can believe that too without a single
doubt dear Christian then you are much closer to heaven than you think!
Pastor John Piper argues, in his Desiring God, Meditations of a Christian Hedonist,
that true joy is not removed from self-interest. He scoffs at the idea of
disinterested joy. You’ll admire his boldness! “This is a serious book about
being happy in God” he opines. “It’s about happiness because that is what our
Creator commands.”
C.S. Lewis thinks the world is weary of serious
enjoyment. “God finds our desires not too strong but too weak.” He contends
that we settle for far less in life than we are really worth. Are you enjoying
him yourself? If not pray to God to rekindle that joy. “Search me,” cried the
psalmist. And a bruised reed God will not break.
The
Bible and Contradiction
The knowledge of the word of God is very crucial for
one to be truly happy in God. The Bible has many apparent contradictions and
without acknowledging that is to fall into one perpetual extreme or another.
Jesus is the prince of peace, but Jesus also came not to bring peace but a
sword.
And the Preacher would have us all go to the house
of mourning rather than the house of mirth. James is even more forthright: “Be afflicted, and mourn, and weep: let your
laughter be turned to mourning, and your joy to heaviness.”
So which way for true enjoyment? Is God not equal?
God forbid!
The Bible is a double edged sword. Just as in life
it cuts both ways. What you feel tonight may not be what you’ll feel in the
morning. Our enjoyment is contextual. We rejoice but we rejoice tremblingly as
the psalmist cautions. There’s a joy of the world and there’s a joy of the
Spirit. May God grant us the love for the latter!
Howbeit we speak wisdom among them that are
perfect: yet not the wisdom of this world, nor of the princes of this world,
that come to nought: But we speak the wisdom of God in a mystery, even
the hidden wisdom, which God ordained before the world unto our glory. 1Co 2:6-7.
Which things also we speak, not in the
words which man's wisdom teacheth, but which the Holy Ghost teacheth; comparing
spiritual things with spiritual. 1Co 2:13.
Let scripture interpret scripture. Else the
temptation will always be there for man to exceed his God in spirituality, or
to sway to the other extreme and act profanely.
It bothered the Pharisees once for example that
Jesus ate and drank with sinners. But Jesus who knew the heart of every person
regarded them with bemusement on one hand and on another he lambasted them for
their hypocrisy.
Refusal to be happy is a sign of ingratitude. It is
a disdain at God’s works. And when one is possessed of a thankless heart even
the grasshopper becomes a burden.
So we enjoy God in worship. We enjoy him in our
hobbies and families. We enjoy him in our professions. The extrovert will enjoy
him in his dance and feast. But the introvert enjoys his God best in silence.
All are God’s people and there’s neither Jew nor Greek. “Whether therefore ye eat, or drink, or whatsoever
ye do, do all to the glory of God” (1Co 10:31).
Jesus is the author and finisher of our faith. He
started it and he’s going to complete it. May we now return to the land of our possession
and enjoy it!
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