"Joy
Cometh"
(Exhortation
- March/April 2009)
When
Barack Obama was inaugurated
as President of the
United States our television screens were full of pictures of the
ecstasy of the people. There was abundant rejoicing, joy and gladness.
It is incredible that so much is expected of one man. The evident
pleasure and excitement among the massed crowds of two million people
in Washington was remarkable. Here was a nation, indeed the whole
world, sensing a desperate need. They needed to believe there was a
future worth living for. Perhaps for many of them, it was the first
time they had ever felt that their way of life was in serious danger. A
sense of urgency was in the air: could Obama lead them out of the
wilderness? What kind of "change"
is ahead?
People around the world, in every country, were aware of
this event and its potential significance to them. The world is now "one" in rejoicing
or grieving over big events. I recall the death and funeral of Princess
Diana. I happened to be in Nepal at the time, it was early in the use
of satellite TV, and for hour after hour the offerings of grief at her
funeral were portrayed. The funeral was a very different occasion, the
opposite of joy, but demonstrating how human joy is so transient. It
has ever been so. Today, more than ever, we live for the moment. And
now moments that can be shared by billions, situations in which there
is an extreme change of fortune, attract enormous public interest.
The
raising up of Joseph
Turning to the Scriptures, we think of the enormous
change of fortune in the life of Joseph, his dramatic exaltation from
the degradation of an Egyptian prison. Garbed in new clothes, and
filled with God-given assurance, he was able to capture the confidence
of Pharaoh, who appointed him to a position of the highest
responsibility. Imagine the scene. Men shouted before him, "Make way, bow the knee",
as he traveled throughout Egypt in the best style. This was the
greatest nation of that age, more than comparable to the role the USA
has played in our age.
There commenced a period of prosperity beyond measure;
harvests were wonderful. There was an abundance of food, the like of
which had never been witnessed before. The Egyptians could not keep
count of all that the storehouses held; they needed to build more.
Imagine if there had been no Joseph, no message from God! What would
have happened to Egypt and in the surrounding nations? For a time there
would have been a glut of food; it would have been squandered; no one
would have thought to build extra storehouses. The Nile always flooded
to make the land fertile, and they were sure life would continue as it
always had within their experience!
We can make a comparison with the relative glut of money
and possessions in the world. This has brought relative prosperity to
more and more countries in recent years. The rich in particular have
rejoiced that they can greatly increase their wealth and boast as to
who has the most billions! Have any been wise enough to see that this,
like the grain harvest in Egypt, was too remarkable to last, being
based largely on illusory foundations — because a sort of
insanity has taken command of the reasoning of greedy men, and their "success" blinded
the minds of others?
Egypt set the highest standards of glorifying their
leaders in death, as much as in their lives. What work went into those
remarkable pyramids? We still marvel at how they were able to build
them. What work went into carving the statues of the Pharaohs; yet was
it so different from the world today? America has carved faces of past
presidents on Mount Rushmore and has an ever-burning flame at the
Kennedy Memorial in Arlington National Cemetery, where a silent
reverence is maintained.
Nearly every city has its statues of the greats of the
past. Every town in India has statues of Gandhi. The burial places,
such as the island on which Princess Diana is buried, are testimonies
to human joys and sorrows; they have become places for pilgrimage. They
cause us to meditate on the deep spiritual darkness that covers the
earth. Humans are blinder than ever to the true reality of God; they
are unable to look inward to see their lack of genuine God-fearing
spirituality.
Different
kinds of "joy"
As we reflect on the transient joys witnessed at
Obama’s inauguration, we meditate upon the differences from
the "joy"
that is mentioned so often in the Scriptures. Think of the parables of
Jesus which conclude with the words, "Enter thou into the joy of our
Lord." Is the "joy"
referred to in the Scriptures only a joy to be looked for in the
future? Did Jesus know "joy"
in his mortal life?
The Greek word chara is also translated gladness,
joyfulness and rejoicing. Bible dictionaries describe this word as
indicating more a state of mind, a quality in our attitudes, than a
transient emotion. There are many inspiring words penned by the
prophets, words that we sing or hear sung; we know them so well:
"The
ransomed of the Lord shall return and come to Zion with singing, with
everlasting joy and gladness. And sorrow and sighing shall flee
away…" (Isa 51:11).
There are times of joy recorded in the Bible, but the
situations that come more readily to mind are the times of sadness,
such as when Jesus wept, when all around him were weeping as they came
to the tomb of Lazarus. One occasion when the disciples knew joy, Luke
tells us, was when they returned to Jerusalem, having witnessed the
ascension of their Master to heaven. Then they "returned to Jerusalem with
great joy" (Luke 24:52). When Peter stood up to preach on
the day of Pentecost, his message was one of future joy. He quoted the
Psalms of David and their reference to Christ, that God’s
Holy One would not "see
corruption". "You
have made known to me the ways of life; you will make me full of joy in
your presence" (Acts 2:27,28). Peter sensed the joy that
was then in heaven.
The writer to the Hebrews picks up this thought in words
very familiar to us, when he tells us to:
"Run with
patience the race that is set before us, looking unto Jesus, the author
and finisher of our faith, who for the joy that was set before him,
endured the cross, despising the shame and has sat down at the right
hand of God" (Heb 12:2).
A life of
joy
So was the mortal life of Jesus all an anticipation of
future joy? Is there no hint at all that Jesus experienced joy in his
mortal life? There is just one significant passage. Jesus says to his
disciples:
"As the
father loved me, I also have loved you; abide in my love. If you keep
my commandments you will abide in my love, just as I have kept my
Father’s commandments, and abide in his love."
Then he concludes with these telling words:
"These
things I have spoken to you, that my joy might remain in you, and that
your joy may be full" (John 15:9-11).
We must capture the full meaning here of "my joy remaining in you."
The joy of Jesus is not some transient emotion; it is the spirit that
abides; it is the reality of a relationship with that which is divine;
it is the phenomenon of true inner peace that arises from that
relationship. Only with that experience can the joy of a disciple be
full, or complete. It is the joy Jesus experienced.
Surely it is a joy which compares with the joy of the
angels when a sinner repents and turns to take on the name of Christ!
Meditate on the nature of that joy, the spirit which we imagine to
exist in heaven. Compare it with the kinds of joy we have in this life.
Human joys are a hollow echo when compared to the completeness of the
joy of which Jesus speaks.
We must beware of thinking that the happy, relaxed,
pleasurable times in our lives have any real comparison with the
completeness of true spiritual joy. Spiritual joy is an unfathomable
wonder of inner peace, coupled with a far-reaching vision of what our
Master experienced, and from which he derived his joy.
King David knew times of great joy, such as when he was
dancing before the LORD when the ark was at last brought into
Jerusalem. He could write in his Psalms:
"Let all
those rejoice who put their trust in you; let them ever shout for joy,
because you defend them; let those also who love your name be joyful in
you. For you, O LORD, will bless the righteous; with favour you will
surround him as with a shield" (Psa 5:11,12).
The
necessity of shadows
But as we reflect upon the life of David, we recall the
many times his commitment to the LORD led him through paths of danger,
and a "walk through the
valley of the shadow of death" (Psa 23:4). This was, in
its own way, a necessary corollary to feelings of joy. It reminds us of
the challenging words at the start of the Epistle of James, where he
tell us to "count it
all joy when you fall into various trials."
Walking through the shadows of the valley of death
serves to highlight the wonder and privilege of the times we are
walking in the light of the Son. When an artist paints a picture, it
looks wrong if there are no shadows. The shadow in the valley brings
the light on the hilltops into glorious and dominating focus.
The Psalms have many valuable lessons to teach us on
true joy, and also to remind us of the times of famine when we need to
go to the storehouses for grain. How tragic if we have failed to
harvest enough grain to make the bread which comes down from heaven! We
need this to restore our inner joy, strength and vision. With the
harvest fields of the world’s materialism looking rather
barren, we may well have to go to our own storehouses more often.
Indeed, this experience will be good for us — spiritually.
David’s words are, in many places, a store of "grain". For
example, he writes:
"Be
merciful to me O God, for man would swallow me up…whenever I
am afraid I will trust in you. In God (I will praise his Word), in God
I have put my trust; I will not fear: what can flesh do to me?"
(Psa 56:1,3,4).
Then he answers his question, "What can flesh do to me?"
by adding:
"When I
cry out to you, then my enemies will turn back; this I know, because
God is for me" (v 9).
After confessing his sins in that remarkable Psalm 51,
and seeking to be washed thoroughly from his iniquity and cleansed from
his sin, David’s plea is: "Restore to me the joy of your
salvation" (v 12). This is a joy that is most precious to
us, far greater than any other sort of joy, and one many of us may well
rest upon in the coming "lean
years", when there is little or no harvest of material
things, and we need to go to the storehouses we have made, with full
assurance of faith. We will need to share the stored grain with each
other. We must not let the values and the joys and sorrows of the world
distract us.
Funerals
of sorrow, and a funeral of joy
Finally, reflect on the outpourings of grief at the time
of the death of John F. Kennedy or Princess Diana, and the apparent
contrast when our Lord died. Those who rejoiced at our Lord’s
death were his enemies, while the fearful women among his followers
watched at a distance. His main followers, such as Peter, hid in fear
and distress because they had let him down. Two brave men successfully
sought possession of his body and placed it in a tomb to save it from
being cast into the fires of Gehenna — this was probably the
fate of the two thieves, as with those of common criminals. There was
no grand funeral for our Master — the very opposite! But is
that true?
No, it is not true. It has been, and still is, week by
week, the most tremendous "funeral"
of any man who has ever lived! We gather together around these emblems
and marvel at his voluntary sacrifice and awesome death. Think of the
countless millions over the last 2,000 years who have joined together
in keeping his memory every week: a memory to be kept until he comes to
eat and drink anew with his faithful, loyal and true followers. As we
partake yet again of the memorials of his sacrifice, let us treasure
that inner joy, that the world can in no way appreciate. How great is
our joy, brethren and sisters, how wonderful and privileged our
anticipation of future joy.
And we treasure the words of a familiar hymn in our
hearts:
"Joy
cometh! Sighing, sorrowing one —
Joy
cometh! With the rising sun;
Joy — holy, blessed, perfect, pure,
Joy — ever flowing, ever sure!
"Joy
cometh! For the Lord doth come>
To wake
the song that now is dumb!
All righteous tongues shall find employ
In songs of everlasting joy."
David Caudery
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