5 Days To A Happier YouНамуна
We’ve been taught how to suffer like Jesus. To be sure, the Scriptures reveal a suffering Jesus. But the Scriptures also reveal a happy Jesus.
Jesus’ first miracle wasn’t at a grave site. It was at a party.
Back in Jesus’ day, weddings were a big deal. The wedding reception wasn’t a four-hour shindig with bell-shaped mints, a punch bowl, and a disco ball. The party lasted for days. It was considered bad manners to exhaust the supply of food or wine. But something embarrassing happened at the wedding in Cana. The hosts ran out of wine. And Mary, the mother of Jesus, found out about it. So she marched over to her son: “They have no more wine” (John 2:3).
At first Jesus said it was not his time to perform miracles.
But then, for some reason, he reconsidered. He ordered helpers to fill jars with water. He then turned the water to wine—the best wine.
Jesus gladdened a wedding. Jesus was the life of the party.
Jesus wasn’t the kind of man who despised parties, jubilant crowds, or noisy children. He was regularly in the company of friends. He enjoyed the dinner table. Imagine the happiness at the occasion of a child’s healing, at the side of Lazarus’s tomb, at the home of the Emmaus travelers. See Jesus, surrounded by children, when he said, “Let the little children come to me.” What child would ever draw near to a killjoy Jesus?
Let’s examine the Scriptures in light of Jesus’ character of gladness. When we do that, we discover that happiness isn’t unholy after all. It’s just misunderstood.
Scripture reveals a Jesus who delights in people. Let us delight in him too.
Read: When the master of ceremonies tasted the water that was now wine, not knowing where it had come from (though, of course, the servants knew), he called the bridegroom over. “A host always serves the best wine first,” he said. “Then, when everyone has had a lot to drink, he brings out the less expensive wine. But you have kept the best until now!” (John 2:9-10, New Living Translation)
Reflect: Think about Jesus’ decision to perform his first miracle at a place of great happiness. Today, imagine Jesus with you, wherever you are, not as a watchdog for your behavior, but as a friend, delighting in what brings you delight.
Pray: Ask God to be present with you as you take delight in his good and plentiful gifts. Take some time to thank him for areas where he has brought unexpected blessing.
Adapted from The Happiness Dare copyright © 2016 by Jennifer Dukes Lee. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers, Inc. All rights reserved.
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About this Plan
Does God care about your happiness, or only your holiness? Is happiness selfish? Join Jennifer Dukes Lee for the next five days on a journey toward God-approved happiness.
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