| 
      Print Happiness 
		Stop for a moment and make a list of 
		the things in life that would make you happy if you could change them. 
		In John 4:35, Jesus said the fields are already “white unto harvest”. I 
		am convinced that at least part of what Jesus meant was that people in 
		the world are looking for true abiding happiness and joy, in their 
		lives. But they do not realize that it comes through God. Everyone can 
		make a list of things that would make them happy. Only a few are so 
		happy that they would choose to change nothing in their lives. The world 
		is searching for happiness. 
		Bro. Jack Wilhelm has preached a sermon 
		about happiness he calls “Life’s Most Elusive Lesson.” That most people 
		find happiness elusive is evident from the excesses in which we indulge 
		ourselves without ever being satisfied. Never in recorded history have 
		so many done so many destructive things to themselves either to escape 
		reality or in an effort to find a worthwhile reality. Alcoholism, drug 
		abuse, illicit sex, homosexuality, TV, movies, entertainment, divorce, 
		child abuse, lotteries, wealth schemes, overeating, war, and constant 
		pockets of poverty are all symptoms of a world that has found no joy in 
		their hearts and no answers in their lives, no means of building lasting 
		joyful relationships with others who occupy this world. And, the 
		continued excesses in these things are evidence that any joy they bring 
		is momentary and unsatisfactory.  
		The happiness of which we speak may 
		show on the outside because our “countenance” is happy and our lives are 
		given to service, but it is an internal characteristic not dampened by 
		the things that happen to us. This is readily seen. The apostles had 
		just been beaten, but they were rejoicing they were counted worthy to 
		suffer (Acts 5:40-41). Paul and Silas, having been whipped with many 
		stripes, and being in stocks in prison, sang praises to God (Acts 
		16:23-25). Stephen, dying from being stoned, was so peaceful and joyful 
		with his own condition, that his prayer in this ordeal was for the 
		forgiveness of others. Paul’s words to the church at Philippi while he 
		was in prison were “Rejoice in the Lord always, and again, I say 
		rejoice” (Phil. 4:4). Bro. Cleon Lyles, in his book, Make Way For 
		Happiness, spoke of the joy of those early saints this way: “The 
		first century saints were completely happy. Never have we read of a 
		happier people. They shouted and sang all over the hard, cruel Roman 
		Empire. They never dreamed of the conveniences we enjoy. Many of them 
		did not have a home in which to live. Most of them had less than people 
		have today who are said to be living in poverty. Yet they were so happy 
		that others sought the happiness they saw in them. Many people found it. 
		In their generation, in the Roman Empire, they converted millions to 
		Christ when the learned what Christianity was all about. In addition to 
		this, they took the message of Christ to every nation under heaven in 
		their generation. They revealed that happiness is something that comes 
		from the inside of a person and not from the outside.” In every nation, 
		whether there is poverty or wealth, there is misery of heart and mind in 
		the population of that nation. Christians, if joy is to be carried to 
		the world, it will only be through us. Let us determine in this month to 
		fix our lives and bring peace into our hearts by embracing the biblical 
		principles of happiness we will be studying this month in the 
		E-bulletins. If you do not yet get these and would like them, simply 
		email me at mglenn1023@yahoo.   Some Thought Provoking Sayings 
		About Happiness   
		“Sometimes your joy is the source of 
		your smile, but sometimes your smile can be the source of your joy.” 
		Thich Nhat Hanh 
		“Happiness is a conscious choice, not 
		an automatic response.” Mildred Barthel.  
		“Success is getting and achieving what 
		you want. Happiness is wanting and being content with what you get.” 
		Bernard Meltzer  
		“I have learned to seek my happiness by 
		limiting my desires, rather than in attempting to satisfy them.” John 
		Stuart Mill.  
		“Cheerfulness in most cheerful people 
		is the rich and satisfying result of strenuous discipline.” Edwin 
		Percy Whipple 
		“A happy person is not a person in a 
		certain set of circumstances, but rather a person with a certain set of 
		attitudes.” Hugh Downs 
		“We tend to forget that happiness 
		doesn't come as a result of getting something we don't have, but rather 
		of recognizing and appreciating what we do have.” Fredrick Koeing 
		“You 
		can complain because roses have thorns,  or you can rejoice because 
		thorns have roses.” Ziggy  Mike 
		Glenn     
		
		See More on Happiness from this series   |