The Reason I Get up in the Morning

No matter what is or isn’t working in my ministry, no matter what difficulties or battles I am facing, the expansive glory of God gives me reason to get up in the morning and do what I have been gifted and called to do with enthusiasm, courage, and confidence. My joy isn’t handcuffed to the surrounding circumstances or relationships; I don’t have to have my heart yanked wherever they go. I have reason for joy because I am a chosen child and a conscripted servant of the King of kings and Lord of lords, the great Creator, the Savior, the sovereign, the victor, the one who does reign and will reign forever. He is my Father, my Savior, and my boss. He is ever near and ever faithful. My passion for ministry is not about how I am being received; it flows out of the reality that I have been received by him. My enthusiasm is not because people like me, but because he has accepted and sent me. My passion is not the result of my ministry being as glorious as I thought it could be, but because he is eternally and unchangeably glorious. So, I preach, teach, counsel, lead, and serve with a gospel passion that inspires and ignites the same in the people around me.

Paul David Tripp, Dangerous Calling (Wheaton, IL: Crossway, 2012), 122-123.

Christian Joy

Joy is the absence of anxiety.  The joy of the Lord is the secret of our strength (Nehemiah 8.10).  We lose our joy when we experience anxiety.  This frequently happens when our behavior is in conflict with our ideals.  Many Christians endure joyless lives because their practice in the nitty-gritty situations of life does not conform to what they know God expects of them.  As a consequence they suffer from frustration and face eventual defeat.

Cyril J. Barber, Nehemiah and the Dynamics of Effective Leadership (Neptune, NJ: Loizeaux Brothers, 1984), 163-164.

The Secret of Christian Joy

The secret of Christian joy is to believe what God says in His Word and act upon it.  Faith that isn’t based on the Word is not faith at all; it is presumption or superstition.  Joy that isn’t the result of faith is not joy at all; it is only a ‘good feeling’ that will soon disappear.  Faith based on the Word will produce joy that will weather the storms of life.

Warren W. Wiersbe, Be Determined (Colorado Springs, CO: ChariotVictor Publishing, 1992), 101.