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Summary: Why are some Christians so unhappy so much of the time? This sermon answers that question and explains how we can experience abiding joy that stays...even in the hard times.

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No Longer a Slave to MISERY!

Series: No Longer Slaves

Chuck Sligh

March 25, 2019

NOTE: A PowerPoint presentation is available for this sermon by request at chucksligh@hotmail.com.

TEXT: Please turn to John 15:11

INTRODUCTION

Illus. – Mark Twain was a professional humorist whose lectures and writings made people around the world laugh and, for a short time, forget their troubles. Yet Mark Twain himself was, in private, a man whose life was broken by sorrow. When his daughter Jean died suddenly of an epileptic seizure, Twain, too ill to go to the funeral, said to a friend, “I have never greatly envied anyone but the dead. I always envy the dead.”

Contrast that with Jesus Christ, who the Bible says was “a man of sorrows and acquainted with grief.” Yet He possessed a deep, irrepressible joy. Just hours before facing the agonizing death of Calvary in just a few short hours, Jesus said to His followers here in John 15:11 – “These things have I spoken unto you, that my joy might remain in you, and that your joy might be full.”

Jesus, as God, knew full well what lay ahead of Him: Ahead lay betrayal, desertion and denial by his own disciples; a mock trial; agony and suffering; God’s wrath poured upon Jesus when He would bear our sins on the cross. And yet here in John 15, when He spoke to His disciples, He expressed hope that they might experience the same joy HE experienced, and that their joy might be full, for he says, “that MY joy might remain in you…”

What we see in the life of Jesus was an ABIDING joy. That is, it was not a joy that came and went. It was a joy that never left Him.

In the cheerful, happy times of His life—Jesus had joy. – For instance: When the disciples made progress in their spiritual growth, when the harlot honored Him by washing His feet with costly perfume and her hair, when the throngs praised Him as He entered the streets of Jerusalem—Jesus had joy.

But unlike us, Jesus never lost His joy in the bad times: When the disciples bickered like immature schoolkids—Jesus had joy. When they lacked faith—He never lost His joy. When the Pharisees hounded him day after day—He STILL had an abiding joy. Even on the cross He did not lose His joy, for Hebrews 12:2 says: “...who for the JOY that was set before him endured the cross…” This same joy Jesus had, He says in our text that He wanted US to experience, that it would be ABIDING, and that it would be FULL.

Sadly, few Christians actually experience this abiding joy on a regular, consistent basis. They are slaves to disappointment and negativism when they could be walking in the sunshine of joy. They’re up and down—on the mountaintop today; in the valley of despair tomorrow.

They find such commands as 1 Thessalonians 5:16 – “Rejoice evermore” impossible to imagine as a reality in their own lives.

Paul wrote Philippians just before his beheading while in a Roman dungeon. In that letter, written under discouraging times and difficult circumstances, he uses the words joy and rejoicing 18 times in its four short chapters. To many Christians, such joy in the midst of such trial is incomprehensible.

What robs us of our joy? Why is our joy so dependent upon circumstances? Why are we so up and down like a yo-yo? The answer is simple: We lose our joy when we fill up with the wrong fuel (unless sin is the issue).

Illus. – Let me illustrate what I mean: In my early adulthood, most cars still ran on LEADED GAS. As long as it was filled with a good grade of leaded gas, my car ran just fine.

However, if I were to put the wrong kind of fuel in, I was headed for trouble. If I were to fill it with UNLEADED GAS, it would have run for a while—but the car was made to run on LEADED fuel. After a while, the motor would begin making a knocking noise that would get worse and worse until finally I’d have a breakdown if I didn’t put in leaded gas. It might take a while, but eventually it would ruin the engine.

Now, I could speed up the process up by filling it with DIESEL FUEL. I’m told that a non-diesel car will run on diesel fuel—for a tank or two. But very quickly, the car would break down.

Now I could REALLY speed things up by pouring SUGAR WATER in the gas tank! I probably wouldn’t get a mile down the road! The pistons would lock, the head gaskets would blow, and I would be calling a tow truck and heading to the used car lot for a new car.

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