By Marvin A. McMickle | Senior Pastor, Antioch Baptist Church, Cleveland, Ohio.
That response reminds me of the gospel song that says, "After all I've been through, I still have joy." That is what separates joy from the false gods of happiness, pleasure and thrills. When you have joy, the devil can throw everything he has against you and you just keep on pushing—not because you are that strong, but because
God is bigger than anything that life can do to you.
Every year at about this time, I remind you of the difference between the phrase
all is right and
all is well. The first phrase suggests everything in your life is in order and under perfect control. It suggests everything is going exactly as you desire and you do not have a worry in the world. I cannot think of many days in my life when I can say with a straight face that all is right.
However, the phrase
all is well suggests something very different.
All is well suggests that things may not be going according to my plan. Things may not be right with my body. My finances and my relationships may not be right according to the standards of this world. Nevertheless, I can still sing the song that says:
When peace like a river attendeth my way,when sorrows like sea billows roll;whatever my lot, thou has taught me to say,it is well; it is well with my soul.Things have not been alright this week, but it is well with my soul. In the words of the commercial by Nationwide Insurance Company, "Sometimes life comes at you fast"—but it is well with my soul. After all I've been through, I still have joy and it is well with my soul.
I have some advice for those still saying,
"I can't get no satisfaction"—they need to look somewhere else for their contentment. They should consider
Isaiah 55:2,
6 which says,
"Why do you spend your money for that which is not bread, and your labor for that which does not satisfy?…Seek ye the Lord while he may be found."This is the gift of the Advent season; it is a season when we are reminded that the best things in life work from the inside out, not from the outside in. Life is not about happiness, pleasure, thrills or highs. Real satisfaction in life comes from the themes of Advent, three of which are also listed among the fruits of the Spirit—love, joy and peace.
There is a song I learned in the devotional services of the Baptist church that says:
"This joy I have the world didn't give to me,The world didn't give it, and the worldcan't take it away."This is what separates joy from the cheap thrills, the fleeting happiness and the temporal pleasures associated with this world; only joy can say,
"The world didn't give it, and the world can't take it away."