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The Secret of Christian Joy

door Vance Havner

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The church suffers today from a saddening lack of old-fashioned, simple-hearted, overflowing, Christian joy. We have plenty of knowledge, plenty of enthusiasm and denominational zeal, but Christians and churches that started out in revival fires are living in the smoke, and the "amens" and "hallelujahs" have gone from most assemblies of the saints. When one recalls that we are to rejoice in the Lord always - and then looks in on the average Sunday congregation, he realizes that something has happened to us since Pentecost. We meet on the Lord's day more as though we had assembled to mourn a defeat than to celebrate a victory. Although the New Testament centers in a cross and is bathed in the blood of martyrs and blackened by the fires of persecution, its note from beginning to end is one of triumphant joy. In John 20:20 we read: "Then were the disciples glad, when they saw the Lord." Here we have the secret of Christian joy: it turns upon those two words, "then" and "when." We are glad when we see the Lord. It does not read, "Then were the disciples glad when they saw themselves." Our verse does not say, "Then were the disciples glad when they saw each other." Nor were these disciples glad when they saw their circumstances. We do not even read that the disciples were glad when they saw a particular doctrine about the Lord. It is the supreme need of the hour that believers should look away from all else, much of which may be good, and see only the Lord. Then shall we have fresh assurance and joy!… (meer)
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The church suffers today from a saddening lack of old-fashioned, simple-hearted, overflowing, Christian joy. We have plenty of knowledge, plenty of enthusiasm and denominational zeal, but Christians and churches that started out in revival fires are living in the smoke, and the "amens" and "hallelujahs" have gone from most assemblies of the saints. When one recalls that we are to rejoice in the Lord always - and then looks in on the average Sunday congregation, he realizes that something has happened to us since Pentecost. We meet on the Lord's day more as though we had assembled to mourn a defeat than to celebrate a victory. Although the New Testament centers in a cross and is bathed in the blood of martyrs and blackened by the fires of persecution, its note from beginning to end is one of triumphant joy. In John 20:20 we read: "Then were the disciples glad, when they saw the Lord." Here we have the secret of Christian joy: it turns upon those two words, "then" and "when." We are glad when we see the Lord. It does not read, "Then were the disciples glad when they saw themselves." Our verse does not say, "Then were the disciples glad when they saw each other." Nor were these disciples glad when they saw their circumstances. We do not even read that the disciples were glad when they saw a particular doctrine about the Lord. It is the supreme need of the hour that believers should look away from all else, much of which may be good, and see only the Lord. Then shall we have fresh assurance and joy!

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