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Happiness Is the Residue of a Holy Life Not long ago I heard a speaker give an impressive message in which he attributed our moral free fall to the pursuit of happiness instead of holiness. It was a great message. You have no doubt heard someone say, “God doesn’t want us to be happy; He wants us to be holy.” I understand the point. But why do they have to be mutually exclusive? Since the Bible regularly talks I think a better solution is to describe the correct relationship between happiness and holiness. All Men Want Happiness Pascal said, “All men seek happiness. This is the chief motive of every action of every man—even of those who hang themselves.” Wanting to be happy is part of what it means to be human. What do you ask your spouse at the end of the day? “Did you have a good day?” Or, “How was your day?” Our common goal is to answer, “I had a great day.” Translation: I’m happy. To be happy is normal, natural, and healthy. The issue is not whether or not a man wants to be happy—we all do. The issue is how we go about pursuing it. The BeHappyTudes The worldly way to pursue happiness emphasizes attributes of strength and power. They might look like this….
The Problem
The reason people continue to pursue the BeHappyTudes is because they do lead to happiness—at least a type of happiness, and at least for a while. The problem, however, is that it’s a happiness of the fleeting kind. It is happiness that starts big, but shrinks over time. Everyone knows a man who got everything he wanted, only to end up miserable. And if worldly happiness is a man’s idol, he will cling to the shrinking remnants of his happiness and, in the process, become a bitter, angry person. At the end of the road, happiness without holiness is hellish. The Great Reversal When we lived as worldly men, we all believed the same lies—the BeHappyTudes. Jesus understood this, which is why He made a
This is the great reversal of all human values. It is nothing less than the description of a holy life. Happiness, it turns out, is the residue of a holy life. The sure path to a happy life is to lead a holy life of obedience under the power of the Holy Spirit.
My wife, Patsy, struck up a friendship with a 90-year-old woman who lives down the street from us. Patsy has been dropping in on her from time to time. She’s a cheerful person. She spent her working years as a bartender and waitress. One day the woman wasn’t feeling too good so Patsy asked, “Would you like me to rub your feet?” So now Patsy rubs the woman’s feet on occasion when she drops by. Patsy caught wind that the owners of the bar where the woman had worked (until not that many years ago!) were planning to throw her a 90th birthday party. Patsy said, “Oh, you must be so excited.” “I am, but I don’t think I’m going to go.” “Why not?” asked my wife. “My hair is just such a mess. I don’t feel very good about myself.” Patsy arranged for her own hairdresser to make a house call and do all the girly things you can do to a woman’s hair. Our 90-year-old neighbor loved the results, and it lifted her spirits enough that she decided to attend her birthday party. Patsy and I went, too. It was touching to see all the people who she loved and who obviously loved her, too. Patsy was simply being obedient to the promptings of the Holy Spirit. It was, for her, how she could live out the Beatitudes—how she could express her faith in a holy life. And the result? Extreme happiness—happiness of the lasting kind.
When a man says, “I want money, fame, or power,” is that what he really wants? I don’t think so. I think what he really wants is the feeling he thinks he will get from those things.
True happiness, however, is not the result of money, fame, or power. Instead, it is a gift from God for those who adopt The Great Reversal of human values. Teach men that the BeHappyTudes can make them happy, but only with happiness of the shrinking kind. To lead a holy life—the kind of life described by Jesus in the Beatitudes—brings happiness of the lasting kind. Teach men that happiness is the residue of a holy life.
© 2008. Patrick Morley. All rights reserved. This article may be reproduced Get a printed version of A Look in the Mirror and more in |
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