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desire to be happy is one of the most universal
of human desires. Few people put anything else
ahead of their own happiness. In many a life
this is the most powerful motive. Happiness,
like everything else in this world of law and
order, is the result of the operation of certain
laws. It is a product, the result of certain
processes.
One thing should be
clearly noted. The road to happiness is not a
direct road. If we would arrive at happiness we
must first go somewhere else. On the road
thither we must pass through the gate of duty,
and walking on the way of right, pass through
the village of love, descend into the vale of
humility and go over the stony way of loyalty
and sincerity and ascend to the heights of
innocence. Here, without looking for it we shall
find happiness.
It is a mistake to
think that true happiness can come from mere
gratification of desire. Gratification has its
part, but often pursuit of a worthy motive is a
greater factor. Unworthy motives, selfish
desires, and sensual gratifications, instead of
producing happiness disappoint and disillusion.
It is a law of our natures that the higher the
desire to be gratified or the higher the motive
that we have the higher and truer the happiness
that results. No truer thing was ever said than
that they that "sow to the flesh shall of the
flesh reap corruption." It is the inevitable
consequence.
Gratification of
the desires of the flesh may bring physical joy.
The drunkard and the libertine may join in
singing their drinking songs, their sensual love
songs, and the like, but these are not songs of
true happiness. A sensual joy poisons itself and
dies in the midst of its song. Pure song brings
higher forms of joy and higher and purer
inspiration. It springs from pure and innocent
love, from the home where love reigns, from the
heart that is full of kindness, pity,
consideration for others, and love of goodness.
The highest
happiness comes from the use of our highest
faculties. The exercise of these faculties
blossoms forth in the truest and purest joy. Joy
of mind and of heart rather than enjoyment of
the flesh inspires the heart with rejoicing. The
song that has no minor strain is the song of
innocence, at peace with God and with its
fellow-men. Selfish desire and selfish living
build an impassable barrier between ourselves
and true happiness. The poet spoke truly when he
said,
"Tell me not then
of the pleasures that sting Coiled under
roses of pride; None but the holy and
innocent sing, Out of a bosom where pleasures
abide."
Innocence need not
be a thing that we associate only with
childhood. It may be mature. It may be a
characteristic of middle age and of gray hair.
Innocence is the result of right relations with
God and with man. Right relations can exist only
when a right attitude is maintained. A right
attitude may be maintained only when back of it
lie right desires and right purposes.
Happiness is the
fruit of harmony. Harmony results from
conformity to the laws of our being. The law of
God revealed in the Bible is the law of harmony.
The holy are most truly happy because they are
most truly harmonious. Both their inner lives
and their outer lives are harmonious. Their
relations with God and with man are harmonious.
The elements of strife and warfare are absent.
Happiness is not
the result of where we live or of our
surroundings, or of what we possess. It is the
result of what we are. No matter how favorable
our situation nor how much nor how many things
we possess that should make us happy, if we do
not have within our own breast the elements that
produce happiness we shall never be happy.
We have already
noted that true happiness is associated with
innocence. There is nothing from which greater
happiness springs than an inner consciousness of
being innocent before God. It is a singular
thing that a great number of Christian teachers
have taught that it is impossible for a
Christian to live in innocence before God. The
unhappy effects of this doctrine have been to
rob the Christian life of many of its joys and
to make many people look upon it as an
unsatisfying life, a losing battle.
It has been taught
that Christians must sin continually day by day.
Believing this doctrine it is no wonder that
many Christians are unhappy and live far beneath
their privileges. Their outlook is one of
defeat, of constant shortcoming, of repeatedly
enduring a sense of condemnation. Now, such
teaching is assuredly not in harmony with the
teachings of the Scriptures, particularly of the
New Testament. The Christian life there is
pictured to be a joyful life. The command is
"Rejoice evermore." How can one rejoice evermore
when he is conscious of being guilty before God?
Jesus said, "Blessed are the pure in heart." If
there be no such persons Christ's words are
mockery.
What is the New
Testament picture of a Christian? It is of a man
or woman forgiven of their iniquities, cleansed
from their guilt, walking in righteousness
before God. Or, as Paul puts it, "Therefore
being justified by faith we have peace with God
through our Lord Jesus Christ." Jesus said,
"Peace I leave with you. My peace I give unto
you." The joyful fellowship that Paul had with
Christ, manifested in all his epistles, is a
thing inconsistent in its entirety with the sort
of life often said to be the Christian life.
"But," one may say, "How about the seventh
chapter of Romans?" I do not think Paul was very
happy when his life corresponded to the seventh
chapter of Romans. Paul passed out of the
seventh chapter into the eighth chapter that day
on the road to Damascus when Jesus appeared to
him.
From that day there
was a new song in Paul's heart and in his mouth.
He lived a new life, the life pictured in the
eighth chapter. The seventh chapter is not the
picture of a Christian life. It is the picture
of a man without grace trying to live up to the
law of God and finding himself continually
failing. It is a continuation of his argument
extending from the third to the sixth chapters,
of the failure of works and of the efficacy of
grace. Real Christians do not live in the
seventh chapter of Romans. It is not the
reflection of a Christian experience.
Christians live in
fellowship with God. God is their Father. They
are not rebellious sons, but obedient sons. Sin
is a thing of the motive and of the will.
Mistakes, blunders, weaknesses, failures, and
unintentional shortcomings are not sins. To
treat them as sins is to make a vital error. The
Bible does not treat them as sins. Sin is wilful
disobedience. It is rebellion against God, and
nothing save things of this character may
properly be called sins, or be treated as sins.
These other things often called "sins" do not
produce the effects of sin. The real Christian
experience is a walk with God. There is mutual
understanding between the soul and God. There is
earnest desire to please God and an earnest
endeavor to do so.
Besides being in
harmonious relations with God and our fellow
men, unselfish devotion to the highest things
for their own sake is the surest way to be
happy. It is the tree whose fruit is happiness.
It bears "twelve manner of fruits" and always
has troth the fragrant blossoms and the luscious
fruits. The Scripture that says, "The wages of
sin is death," is not a threat. It is a simple
statement of an inescapable fact, now and here
as well as hereafter. Evil always has its own
reward and we begin to draw its dividends the
moment we are guilty of it. It never goes
bankrupt. Its dividends continue to increase as
the years go by. On the other hand, the
dividends of righteousness are never passed.
They are always paid in golden coin.
Disobedience to our
best and highest impulses, aspirations, and
desires must inevitably result in blighted
hopes, an accusing conscience, regret, and a
sense of failure. It is a poison injected into
the cup of happiness. If we would have the song
of happiness in our hearts we must learn that
the secret of the singing heart is to be
innocent, to be true to the best there is in us,
to be living on a plain above the mire of sin,
of selfishness, and of sensual
gratification.
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