The Paradox of Joy: Gift and Command in Faith

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"Joy is not a choice but a sovereign gift, to quote you Pastor John, 'Joy is a god-given spontaneous experience of the beauty, worth, and greatness of God.' Then in the next episode you discuss that we are commanded to Rejoice by Jesus, Peter, and Paul, implying that we have some control over our rejoicing." [00:06:08]

"The Paradox between an emotion being given by God and being commanded by God runs through the whole Bible, and the reason it does, the reason it runs through the whole Bible, is because it's at the heart of living a life that glorifies God by depending on God in doing what he commands us to do." [00:87:32]

"Our creation in God's image grants us the ability to perceive, evaluate, and act, but we are not meant to function independently. Our reliance on God's power ensures that He receives the glory while we receive the joy and help." [00:127:039]

"Whoever speaks, let him speak as one who speaks Oracles of God; whoever serves, let him serve as one who serves by the strength that God supplies, so as we serve in obedience to what he commands, we rely upon strength that's not our own." [00:197:519]

"The Christian Life is meant to be a life of walking by the spirit, Galatians 5:16, or being led by the spirit, Galatians 5:18. We fight against sin, Paul says, by putting to death the Deeds of the body by the spirit." [00:255:76]

"St. Augustine prayed like this in his confessions book 10: 'Give what you command, oh Lord, and command what you will.' Now here's some of the concrete biblical illustrations of what he meant. Let's just take belief in Jesus: command, believe in the Lord Jesus, and you will be saved." [00:318:319]

"Emily was exactly right to quote me as saying on the one hand Joy is a god-given spontaneous experience of the beauty, worth, and greatness of God. That's true, it is a gift. But then saying on the other hand we are commanded to Rejoice by James, Peter, Jesus, and Paul." [00:388:199]

"To live in this Paradox of Joy being a gift and a command, to make it as simple as I can, here's what we do: we look, that's the key word. We look at the reasons God has given us to Rejoice. We look at them in the Bible, and second, we pray." [00:462:16]

"We pray that God would open our eyes to see and feel the value of those reasons the way God intended them to be felt. For example, Paul says we rejoice in the hope of the glory of God, so we look at it, we look at the hope, we ponder it, we think about it." [00:482:96]

"Or Jesus said, 'Rejoice, for great is your reward in heaven.' So we read about that, and we look, and we Ponder, we think, we meditate on the reward in heaven, and then we pray, 'Oh God, open my eyes to the worth of the reward.'" [00:513:64]

"As paradoxical as it sounds, this is a glorious way to live: give what you command and command what you will. Yeah, look and pray, look and pray. So good when God commands us to do things or believe things or decide things or to feel things." [00:600:48]

"He's treating us as genuinely responsible moral persons in His image, unlike all the animals. He's honoring us as the kind of beings who can perceive things and think about things and evaluate things and then feel and act in accord with how we think and evaluate." [00:618:279]

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