Recovering Your Joyનમૂનો
Obedience Is the Secret to Joy
Read Lamentations 3:40.
Joy is an easy thing to lose, but it’s also an easy thing to get back. After you admit that you’ve lost your joy, you need to analyze the cause. You have to look at your life and ask yourself, “How did I lose my joy? What is robbing my joy?”
The Bible tells us many times in Scripture to examine our lives. Lamentations 3:40 says, “Let us test and examine our ways. Let us turn back to the Lord” (NLT).
There are hundreds of killjoys in life, but the two most common I see in people’s lives are an unbalanced schedule and unused talent. You have to have a balance between rest and work, input and output. And you have to use your unique, God-given talents, or you’re going to get frustrated. Take whatever percent of your talent that’s not being used in your job and use it for ministry. If you’re in a job that uses less than 25 percent of your talent, then get out.
Once you’ve figured out how you lost your joy, you need to correct what’s wrong.
Do you know what will rob your joy faster than anything else? When you know the right thing to do and you don’t do it.
The Bible says in James 4:17, “It is sin to know what you ought to do and then not do it.”
So let me ask you: What do you know you need to be doing but you’re not? What has God told you to do but you haven’t started doing yet?
The secret to continual, abundant, and overflowing joy is obedience. It’s doing what God tells you to do. Every time you do what God tells you to do, your life’s going to be filled with joy.
You’re also going to be filled with joy when you think about what’s good in your life. David says in Psalm 126:3, “The Lord has done great things for us, and we are filled with joy” (NIV). The more you focus on what God has done for you, the more joy you’re going to have in your life. Why? Because it produces gratitude. And the attitude of gratitude is the healthiest human emotion.
If you want to get your joy back, first you admit it’s gone, then you analyze the cause. Then, correct what’s wrong, and get an attitude of gratitude. Tomorrow we’ll talk about the last three steps to recovering your joy.
Read Lamentations 3:40.
Joy is an easy thing to lose, but it’s also an easy thing to get back. After you admit that you’ve lost your joy, you need to analyze the cause. You have to look at your life and ask yourself, “How did I lose my joy? What is robbing my joy?”
The Bible tells us many times in Scripture to examine our lives. Lamentations 3:40 says, “Let us test and examine our ways. Let us turn back to the Lord” (NLT).
There are hundreds of killjoys in life, but the two most common I see in people’s lives are an unbalanced schedule and unused talent. You have to have a balance between rest and work, input and output. And you have to use your unique, God-given talents, or you’re going to get frustrated. Take whatever percent of your talent that’s not being used in your job and use it for ministry. If you’re in a job that uses less than 25 percent of your talent, then get out.
Once you’ve figured out how you lost your joy, you need to correct what’s wrong.
Do you know what will rob your joy faster than anything else? When you know the right thing to do and you don’t do it.
The Bible says in James 4:17, “It is sin to know what you ought to do and then not do it.”
So let me ask you: What do you know you need to be doing but you’re not? What has God told you to do but you haven’t started doing yet?
The secret to continual, abundant, and overflowing joy is obedience. It’s doing what God tells you to do. Every time you do what God tells you to do, your life’s going to be filled with joy.
You’re also going to be filled with joy when you think about what’s good in your life. David says in Psalm 126:3, “The Lord has done great things for us, and we are filled with joy” (NIV). The more you focus on what God has done for you, the more joy you’re going to have in your life. Why? Because it produces gratitude. And the attitude of gratitude is the healthiest human emotion.
If you want to get your joy back, first you admit it’s gone, then you analyze the cause. Then, correct what’s wrong, and get an attitude of gratitude. Tomorrow we’ll talk about the last three steps to recovering your joy.
About this Plan
If you want joy in your life, you have to find a balance in your schedule. Pastor Rick shares how you can readjust your input and your output so that your giving and receiving helps you recover your joy, not lose it.
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