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Psalm 16:1-11
Keep me safe, O God, for in you I take refuge.
I said to the Lord, “You are my Lord; apart from you I
have no good thing.”
As for the saints who are in the land, they are the
glorious ones in whom is all my delight.
The sorrows of those will increase who run after other
gods,
I will not pour out their libations of blood or take
up their names on my lips.
So, if
God is a joyful being, which he is; and if the Bible is a joy-filled book,
which it is; and if we are created to live in joy, why don’t we experience it
more often? What defeats and destroys the joy that God wants us to know?
A few
years ago I saw a little story about a corporate outing to the Great America
amusement park in Gurnee, Illinois. Perhaps you have spent a day at Great
America, or a similar amusement park. They are pretty much all the same –
crowds of people; giant roller coasters; cotton candy and all kinds of
attractions designed to create fun and excitement while simultaneously
separating you from your money! My own personal theory to explain the existence
of amusement parks goes like this: Our culture is so starved for genuine joy
that we have created giant “artificial joy machines” (amusement parks) to give
us a kind of simulated joy that lasts just as long as we are on the ride or in
the park! That may be a little cynical, but I think there is at least a kernel
of truth in the thought.
Back to
the corporate outing: This group of adults went to Great America to have fun and to experience the “simulated joy” offered by the roller coasters, etc., but
wound up getting just the opposite when the roller coaster they were on
malfunctioned and left them dangling upside-down 100 feet off the ground for
two hours. In other words – they went looking for joy – but found the opposite!
So what
turns our joy upside down?
The sorrows of those will increase who run after
other gods.
Here
David is talking about the gods of the pagan people that surrounded Israel.
These “gods” demanded all kinds of detestable practices including the sacrifice
of human blood and they did not bring joy, but rather fear and terror. We
may think there are no such pagan gods around us today – and we would be wrong!
If
worship is to offer extravagant devotion
to someone or something, then there is no shortage of candidates for the
place of God in our lives! As human beings we are capable of offering our
extravagant devotion to everything from money to our favorite sports team to a
new car – and, if we do, the Bible says, our
sorrows will increase.
This is
another way of saying that we defeat our own joy when we misplace our
affections. For when we misplace our affections it is inevitable that we will
eventually misplace our worship, misplace our priorities and misplace our
behavior.
So, is
there any way in which you may have limited your own joy by offering your
devotion to a “lesser god?”
Ask God
to both restore and deepen your joy as you offer him your extravagant devotion!
Pastor Brian Coffey
1 comment:
Everything I pursue other than our Triune God, in time, disappoints or fades away. But Jesus who is beyond time, always fills me,excites me,and is ahead of me calling me to follow Him. Joy upon joy...even underneath sorrow.
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