Joy.
When was the last time you laughed until your side hurt from
laughing... and not because of your typical aches and pains?
I am the first to admit that despite physical ailments, life
is good. I have happy moments and time with friends in which
I feel joyful, but I also must admit that I laugh much less
than I would like. Illness has a way of aging us much too soon.
It makes us too serious at times, because we have to think about
how everything will affect our body. There is no "running
off to Vegas," at least not without making sure that
our prescriptions are filled, we have shoes to walk in or a
wheelchair reserved. Illness takes away the ability to say,
"Well be there!" and being assured that we wont
back out.
So how can
we put aside the feelings of heaviness that accompany illness
and find the joy that Tim Hansel describes in his book, You
Gotta Keep Dancin? "Joy has so much to do with
how we see and hear and experience the world. It is not to be
grasped, but given away. It is not to be contained, but shared...
Joy, above all else, is a selfless quality which is magnified
when it is shared and minimized with when is it selfishly grasped."
A particular
commercial makes me cringe every time I hear it. An older man
says, "Life is good when you have your health..."
I want to scream at the television, "Life can be good even
when you dont have your health?" Do we need reminded
that we should feel depressed and the absence of a good life
just because we dont "have our health!!"
Hansel writes, "Joy has more to do with who we are than
what we have, more to do with the healthiness of our attitude
than with the health of our body." Is this what Paul was
getting at when he wrote, "Consider it pure joy, my brothers,
whenever you face trials of many kinds..."? Joy is not
dependent on our circumstances. A Yiddish Proverb says, "What
soap is for the body, laughter is for the soul."
What makes
you smile? What makes you laugh? Friends of mine, who live with
chronic illness, recently adopted two new puppies and despite
the challenges of taking care of them, they say, "They
have brought laughter back into our house. There is life again
in our home." Hansel suggests keeping a folder of jokes
or sayings that bring you laughter. Weve provided a few
church bulletin bloopers to get your folder started.

When
God promised Sarah a child she laughed, but God did give her
what He promised and Sarah said, "God has brought me laughter,
and everyone who hears about this will laugh with me" (Genesis
21:6)...
We may believe
that our circumstances are not funny, but rest assured, God
does have a sense of humor and He may express it in your life
at the most-unexpected moment.
What could
God promise you that would make you laugh? Health? Financial
security? A healed relationship? Just when you think, "Thats
impossible!" God may be tempted to say to you, "Why
do you laugh?" (Genesis 18:13).
Take a moment
this week to search out moments that make you smile. Start alaughter
folder. Read the cartoons. But most importantly, when you pray,
ask God to give you joy. Ask him to multiply those joyful moments
in your life. God will bring more laughter into your life. Expect
it!