“You haven’t done this before. Ask, using my name, and you will receive, and you will have abundant joy.” – John 16:24.
Joy in Jesus is not a mood, a personality trait, or a burst of positive emotion that comes and goes depending on the day. Joy in Jesus is a settled confidence that God is who He says He is, and He will do what He said He would do. It is the deep assurance that we are held, loved, and seen—even when life feels uncertain.
Joy shows up in real life, not in perfect circumstances but in the middle of imperfect ones. When the email comes with news you didn’t want…When your plans fall apart…When the road ahead is foggy and you don’t know what’s next…joy whispers, “Jesus is still here. And He is still enough.”
In John 15:11, Jesus says, “I have told you these things so that you will be filled with my joy. Yes, your joy will overflow!” The joy we receive is not something we manufacture—it is His joy, planted within us. We experience it when we stay close to Him, remain in His words, and abide in His presence. Joy in real life looks like peace, not panic. It looks like choosing gratitude when complaining would be easier. It appears to be resting instead of striving.
Joy is not denial. We don’t pretend pain doesn’t exist. Jesus never asked us to fake happiness. In fact, He said, “I have told you all this so that you may have peace in me. Here on earth you will have many trials and sorrows. But take heart, because I have overcome the world” (John 16:33). Joy does not erase sorrow; it sits beside it and reminds us that sorrow doesn’t get the last word.
Joy in Jesus also shows up in our relationships. A joyful person doesn’t drain life from others—they give it. They serve without needing applause. They forgive quickly, because they know how deeply they have been forgiven. They walk into a room not asking, “Who will encourage me,” but instead, “Who can I encourage today?”
Joy turns ordinary moments into sacred ones—the dinner table, the morning cup of coffee, the laughter shared with a friend, the silent prayer whispered in a car line.
Joy is found in obedience. The more we trust Jesus, the more our joy grows—because obedience plants seeds that bloom into freedom. Real joy is rooted in the unshakeable reality that Christ has already won. Our hope is secure. Our future is settled. Our worth is decided.
Joy is not the absence of hardship. Joy is the presence of Jesus.
Discussion Questions:
- How does God’s joy sustain you during difficult seasons, and can you share an experience where this happened?
- How is Christian joy related to love and hope, and what role does trust in God play in producing this joy?