28.8.18

Choosing Joy – Obeying God in Spite of Feelings

 “The Communists believe that happiness comes from material satisfaction; but alone in my cell, cold, hungry, and in rags, I danced for joy every night.” – Richard Wurmbrand 

At the age of twenty-five Richard Wurmbrand was a successful businessman. He had wealth and influence and had taken full advantage of the pleasures that the world had to offer. Still he was far from being happy. In April 23rd's post, Count it All Joy, you can read how God changed Richard from a man who refused to accept salvation, for fear of the difficulty that accompanied it, into a pastor who prayed that he might bear a cross for his Saviour’s sake. It was in Christ that Richard found the joy that he was unable to get from material goods.

'The Communists believe that happiness comes from material satisfaction' and we, as North Americans, often fall into the belief that happiness, or joy, is a feeling that we cannot control. It comes and it goes - dictated by our surroundings or even our mood. We believe that if we don’t feel joyful than we can not have joy. But Richard Wurmbrand found this assumption also to be false. Suffering starvation, isolation, and cold, as a prisoner of the Communist government, Richard didn’t just feel joy. Sessions of physical and emotional torture don't naturally result in a joyful mood. Yet despite his feelings, rather than because of them, Richard Wurmbrand had joy. How?

He chose it. The abundance of joy that he had found in the presence of His Savior had not ceased to be available to him when he was locked into a prison cell. Anymore than it was stolen from Paul and Silas when they were flogged, thrown into an inner cell, and fastened into stocks (Acts xvi. 22-25). God commands His people over and over again to ‘rejoice’, a word that means to choose or show happiness or joy; to be glad. In the English language emotions, like sad or happy, are adjectives. The word rejoice, however, is a verb – an action word. It is a choice, an action -a movement of soul, to rejoice.  

In Psalm xvi.11 David wrote, “You make known to me the path of life; in Your presence there is fullness of joy; at Your right hand are pleasures forevermore.As Christians, we have been given access to source of joy, who is Christ Himself. However, as it takes a conscious decision to walk to the sink and fill up your empty water glass so it takes a decision to come to Christ and receive the joy that He offers. Paul, Silas, and Richard Wurmbrand all made the decision to take their eyes off of the prison cells that surrounded them, to push aside the feelings of sorrow, self pity, and despair and to look at Jesus instead.

“Obedience to God is always possible. It is a deadly error to fall into the notion that when feelings are extremely strong we can do nothing about them.” – Elisabeth Elliot

In last weeks post, Did God Really Say?, we found that it is truly God’s will for us to rejoice always and to give thanks in all circumstances in Christ Jesus (1 Thessalonians v. 16 - 18). This is done by faith in Christ Jesus. By believing that the circumstances don’t actually factor into our ability to have joy, unless we allow them to keep us from turning our eyes onto Jesus, who remains good and faithful in every situation. When we believe this we begin to feel joy when naturally we should feel sorrow.

Sometimes I was so filled with joy that I felt I would burst if I did not give it expression. I remembered the words of Jesus, “Blessed are you when men come to hate you, when they exclude you from their company and reproach you and cast out your name as evil on account of the Son of Man. Rejoice in that day and leap for joy!”

I told myself, “I’ve carried out only half of this command. I’ve rejoiced, but is that enough? Jesus clearly says we must also leap.”

When the next guard peered through the spy hole, he saw me springing about my cell. His orders must have been to distract anyone who showed signs of breakdown, for he padded off and returned with some food from the staff room: a hunk of bread, some cheese, and sugar. As I took them I remembered how the verse in Luke went on: “Rejoice in that day and leap for joy – for behold your reward is great.” It was a very large piece of bread – more than a week’s ration!” – Richard Wurmbrand, In God’s Underground

As he had chosen joy, so then did Pastor Wurmbrand choose to stand up in his cell and leap. In both cases God rewarded his obedience and He will ours as well. 

In Christ
quiana

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