Finding True Joy and Satisfaction in God

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In our journey of faith, we often grapple with the profound mystery of how God can be everything to us in all aspects of life. This mystery is not about idolizing the things we love but about seeing God in them and loving them for His sake. Our ultimate aim is to have God permeate all our loves, ensuring He has no competitors in our hearts. This is the miracle we seek—a life where God is the gospel, the ultimate good news, and the highest joy. [00:00:44]

The essence of the gospel is the revelation of God's glory in the face of Jesus Christ for our everlasting enjoyment. Everything else is a means to this end. The phrase "God is most glorified in us when we are most satisfied in Him" encapsulates this truth. It is not merely a theological statement but a call to live a life where our satisfaction in God magnifies Him, especially in moments of loss or death. This is the heart of Christian hedonism, where our deepest joy in God becomes the greatest testimony of His worth. [00:02:17]

Philippians 1:20-21 illustrates this beautifully. Paul expresses his desire for Christ to be magnified in his life and death. To die is gain because it means being with Christ, which is far better than anything on earth. This perspective challenges us to see death not as a loss but as a gain, a transition to a fuller experience of Christ. It is a call to live with a heavenly mindset, where our ultimate treasure is not in earthly things but in Christ Himself. [00:08:21]

Furthermore, understanding God's love is crucial. Biblical love is not about God making much of us but about Him doing everything necessary to bring us to enjoy Him. This love may involve stripping away lesser satisfactions to reveal the ultimate satisfaction in God. It is a love that exalts God for our joy, a love that is willing to let us experience loss if it leads us to a deeper enjoyment of Him. [00:19:09]

Jonathan Edwards profoundly influenced this understanding, emphasizing that true joy is found in God, not in ourselves. The joy of the true saint is rooted in the glorious nature of God, while the hypocrite's joy is self-centered. This distinction is vital as we navigate our spiritual journey, ensuring our joy is anchored in God and not in our self-worth. [00:34:34]

God loves us by doing everything He has to do at great cost to Himself to remove every obstacle from inside of us and inside of Him to bring us to the place where we enjoy Him, which makes much of Him. Just like we saw in Philippians 1:20 and 21, when you enjoy Him, you magnify Him. [00:19:12]

How is Christ made magnificent as you breathe your last breath? To breathe it with the confidence and the manifestation of joy that this moment is gain. That's amazing because at that moment, you're losing everything on earth. Health is gone, family's disappearing, the hope for retirement not going to happen, the grandchildren you will never see—gain. [00:07:36]

The reason it's gained to die is because I get Jesus incomplete, no more through a glass darkly, face to face, intimate, full, and that's gain though I lose everything I thought was pleasurable. No more sex, no more physical eating in this in-between time in heaven, no body, bodies lying in the grave, just amazing intimacy and closeness and clarity with the greatest person in the universe. [00:08:41]

God is the one being in the universe for whom self-exaltation is the essential way to love. Get that. If you try to love like that, if I were to walk in here and say, okay, I came to love you folks, now the way I love you is by displaying to you my greatness, my glory, my beauty, my all-satisfying perfections. [00:21:33]

The world, I think by and large, feels love now when I say the world, I mean unregenerate human beings. They have not been born again. They are natural. They think without God at the center. Their affections have not been awakened. They are dead spiritually according to Ephesians 2:5, and being dead spiritually, the spiritual things of God are foolishness to them. [00:16:39]

The joy of the true saint is rooted in the glorious nature of God, while the hypocrite's joy is self-centered. True saints have their minds in the first place inexpressibly pleased and delighted with the sweet ideas of the glorious and amiable nature of the things of God. This is the spring of all of their delights and the cream of all their pleasures. [00:34:34]

The reason God tells us in the Bible that He rejoices over us is to affirm us in what we are and our being that He likes, not to allure us away from that into liking His liking us. The reason you like being liked biblically is because the liking affirms you're liking Him. [00:54:08]

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