... to be blessed, with all the external trappings of the good life, who is so easily miffed at God, while the person who has very little feels a much greater sense of gratitude for life’s little joys and pleasures. This is not to say that in order to find happiness, we need to give away everything we possess. That might help or it might be the worst thing we could possibly do. It might fill us with so much resentment, or even worse, with so much self-righteous pride that we would be intolerable. It is to say ...
... self respect and our witness for Christ in order not to ruffle anybody’s feathers. Then we come to Christ’s words, “Happy are you when men revile you and persecute you and utter all kinds of evil against you falsely on my account . . .” ... a hotel room in Alaska writing. I looked up and saw myself in a looking glass and said to myself: ‘Stanley Jones, you’re a very happy man, aren’t you?’ I replied, ‘Yes, I am.’ And then the vital question: ‘How did you get to be this way?’ And my reply ...
... mission. Paul’s mission lays out what matters most: Pleasing God. Preaching the gospel. Proclaiming Christ. Those are the only measures of success worth counting. And those are the only activities that so fill Paul’s heart with love, and joy, and human happiness that he is “delighted” by life and all those he knows are “dear” to his heart. Paul’s path was never easy. This first letter to the Thessalonians is judged by most scholars to be the earliest of Paul’s correspondence. It was written ...
... will bless me tomorrow for having saved the country from the greatest peril through which it has ever passed, though none but God can ever know the struggle that it has cost me." The decision to do what he felt was right was costly, but there was the happiness of knowing he had done what he felt was right. What are the circumstances that we face? The loss of someone who gave life meaning? The loss of a job that provided for home and family and gave us fulfillment? The loss of health and independence? Are we ...
... a man who was in the Indiana State Prison for 66 years was given his release. Upon getting out and breathing free air again, he told reporters, "I feel like I've just been born again." This is the way a true Christian feels. He lives daily the happiness of a newly released prisoner, for daily he receives the forgiveness of sins. Because of this he no longer has the fear of future punishment for his sins. As a Christian who has been forgiven, he no longer has to worry about being good enough to please God ...
... And, whether or not this occurred to Paul, it's profoundly important. Unless we're filled with joy we cannot pray. And unless we pray we cannot give thanks" (Herbert McCabe, God, Christ and Us; edited and introduced by Brian Davies (New York: Continuum, 2003), 110). 4) Happiness is from the world. Joy is from Christ. In fact, joy is Christ. I tried to purchase this cup on eBay. When it got to $100.00, I gave up. Here was the item description that inspired the intense bidding: A FINE EARLY LUSTER CHILD'S CUP ...
... . It is about moving from a life that is self-centered to a life that is God-centered and other-centered. It is about moving from a life in which we are conscious of what we lack to a profound gratitude for all we have. Thus we find true happiness. Thus we find true blessedness. In 1989, columnist Nick Clooney decided that he, like a modern-day Huck Finn, wanted someone else to do his work for a little while. So he invited a variety of local celebrities from the Kentucky-Ohio area to send in their ideas on ...
... was not a choice he made. Something happened to him within. He fell in love. He was touched. So it is when we experience Christ's presence in our lives. The world seems to change. But it isn't the world at all. We are changed by a touch. HAPPINESS ALSO COMES WHEN WE DISCOVER THE POWER OF PRAYER. An unwritten motto of our culture here in the 21st century is that the busier we are, the happier we are. So, we strive to be busy. It's a mistake. Consider Jesus' approach. By nightfall, word had spread throughout ...
... interesting guest and it was obvious that his remarks were unrehearsed. They simply bubbled up out of his personality that was radiant and happy. It was obvious that the audience loved this old man and they roared with laughter at some of the things he said. It ... Whenever some problem rears its ugly head in our lives, we have a choice. We can allow it to overwhelm us and drain all of the happiness and joy out of our lives. Or, we can face it ... We can chip away at it a little at a time ... We can whittle it ...
... parents. How many times have you watched a grubby, sticky hand hold out to Mom or Dad a bedraggled flower, a half-eaten cookie, a slightly smooshed bug? As the parents exclaim over the treasure they’ve been offered, the child grins and gleams. That’s true happiness. As we grow up there will be countless times we will fail our parents, and countless times our parents will fail us. But we keep wanting to please those who love us, and those we love, to feel their love and appreciation for our entire lives ...
... , Philo followed Jesus wherever He went, and it is said that on the day God's only Son Jesus was crucified, Pilate's only son Philo was at the foot of the cross, weeping over the death of his Lord and Friend. Philo, like millions of persons since found his happiness in Christ. (6) St. Thomas Aquinas told of a man who heard about a very special ox and determined to have it for his own. He traveled all over the world. He spent his entire fortune. He gave his whole life to the search for this ox. At last, just ...
... point that we become enslaved in a legal straightjacket. The laws of God are to be obeyed because they are good laws and meant for our good. They express God’s will for us, and his will is always for our well-being. Obedience to his laws brings blessing or happiness. This is a basic fact we need to learn in our Obedience School. Of course, this is not always the case with human laws. As Christians, we do not teach that a law is to be obeyed regardless of what the law asks us to do. If someone told you ...
... than 2,000 years ago. Even when he knew we would misunderstand him and reject him and fail him, he still chose to love us to the cross and beyond. In this Bible passage, Jesus is trying to share a life-changing truth with us: love is essential for happiness and joy. But Christ had another point to make about love: Love requires sacrifice. He explained it like this, “Greater love has no one than this: to lay down one’s life for one’s friends.” Few of us will ever be asked to die for the people we ...
... come? The gifts looked so ordinary, so regular, so - well, somehow unable to keep me on a high. What do we do now that we’re happy? Well, I got up and got out of the house and went visiting. Mother got busy preparing dinner. To get what we want is often just ... to his people. They are the redeemed of the Lord, and the city in which they dwell shall never be forsaken. Certainly they are happy that salvation has come to them, that they are holy unto the Lord, sought out from all the earth. But, now that they ...
... advertised all of them, but the truck ads out numbered the car ads almost 2 to 1. That's how the world says we should find Happiness. In Stuff. Scripture says we're the abnormal people, "aliens" as Peter puts it in 1 Peter 2:9-16 (NRSV). Listen: [9] But you are ... 'll be won over to God's side and be there to join in the celebration when he arrives." If we're Looking For Happiness, then as Christians, we have to be conscious of the fact that we're different. We live by different rules, beliefs and ethics. And ...
... say to you that likewise there will be more joy in heaven over one sinner who repents than over ninety-nine just persons who need no repentance. Likewise, I say to you, there is joy in the presence of the angels of God over one sinner who repents." There is happiness in heaven when just one lost sinner is found. Notice, by the way, it does not say that the angels rejoice. It says, "there is joy in the presence of the angels." (v.10) It is God who does the rejoicing. Can I tell you how you can always know ...
... , then they are right too. But as a random collection of cells, you are required to make up your own meaning or purpose for your life. Otherwise, your life is just a random series of meaningless events that may or may not meet your criteria for happiness. Jean-Jacques Rousseau was a Swiss philosopher and author who followed this line of thinking. In his influential book Émile, he wrote that a man’s own feelings are the source of all truth and values. A quote from his book reads, “. . . in the depths of ...
... but the person wears the clothes. It is important to understand that Jesus did not give the Beatitudes, a word meaning blessed or happy, to the CROWD. The scripture very clearly states: “And seeing the multitude, he went up on the mountain, and when he sat down ... wealth nor poverty that keeps a man out of the Kingdom of God. It is pride. Jesus is saying that the first step to personal happiness, the first step in our pilgrimage in coming to God, is to get rid of pride. Pride is the root of all sin. Blessed ...
... restore the whole creation? Do we believe that if we will seek first the Kingdom of God, then all else necessary for life and meaning and happiness will be added? We don't have to worry if the first priority of our life is the Kingdom of God. When we really hear ... is not as superficial as it first sounds: "In every life we have some trouble, when you worry you make it double. Don't worry Be happy!" Do we need to rehearse? You don't have to worry if you live in the light. You don't have to worry if you know ...
... and low or no exercise lifestyles. So why are so many of us stopping at the take-out window at the same time we're stocking our freezers with "Lean Cuisine?" Are we hungering for something that we just can't seem to satisfy, no matter how many Happy Meals we ingest? The issue is not eating. Jesus loved to eat. He was always going out to dinner, cooking meals for friends, inviting others to join him for a meal, ready to tend to the stomachs as well as the spirits of his disciples and followers. The straight ...
... but the person wears the clothes. It is important to understand that Jesus did not give the Beatitudes, a word meaning blessed or happy, to the CROWD. The scripture very clearly states: “And seeing the multitude, he went up on the mountain, and when he sat down ... wealth nor poverty that keeps a man out of the Kingdom of God. It is pride. Jesus is saying that the first step to personal happiness, the first step in our pilgrimage in coming to God, is to get rid of pride. Pride is the root of all sin. Blessed ...
... , hymns, and songs from the Spirit. Sing and make music from your heart to the Lord, always giving thanks to God the Father for everything, in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ.” There are two keys that St. Paul gives to us that lead to lasting happiness. First of all, be smart with your life. “Be very careful, then, how you live,” he writes, “not as unwise but as wise, making the most of every opportunity, because the days are evil. Therefore do not be foolish, but understand what the Lord’s will ...
... bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things, endures all things. Love never ends." None of that is typical. All of it is unexpected. It's just not the way we do business in the world. The surprising way of love is the way to a kind of happiness the world cannot give. Do the unexpected. A friend who travels a great deal says his wife leaves love notes in his suitcase or briefcase. Sometimes he opens the notes to the speech he is about to deliver, and there it is. Sometimes he slips his foot into ...
... questions that really need to be reckoned with. Does God really get involved in the things that are going on in our world and in our lives? If the answer is "Yes," then how does God get involved and how can we work with God so that God will give happy endings to our stories? Those are questions that lots of us want to ask. The answers are not simple. The basic biblical answer is, "Yes, God does get involved in our lives." The biblical drama tells us about a God who knows and cares what is going on in our ...
... today’s gospel lesson: “This is the word of the Lord. Thanks be to God.” But did you — do we — really mean that? Are we truly thankful for these words from Luke? In his straightforward way Jesus tells us that those who are blessed, those who are “happy” according to another translation, are the poor, the hungry, the ones who are weeping. Blessed are those who are hated and excluded. And then to make matters worse, he says, “Woe to you who are rich. Woe to you who are full. Woe to you who are ...