Explore the Bible Series for August 5: Zechariah calls us to joy
Posted: 7/19/07
Explore the Bible Series for August 5
Zechariah calls us to joy
• Zechariah 9:1-14:21
First Baptist Church, Duncanville
This week’s lesson is a reminder of God’s promisesâ those available through Jesus’ sacrifice on the cross, as well as those coming on the day we will meet him again. It is a message of hope and a call to live a life of joy.
In the words of Zechariah, “Rejoice greatly, O Daughter of Zion!” (9:9).
Oddly, the call to joy is one of the most misunderstood of God’s callings. How can we be joyful in the midst of life’s difficulties? We must first understand what joy is, and then we must realize how much we have to be thankful for.
Joy vs. happiness
We tend to think of joy as a synonym for happiness. The dictionary defines joy as a feeling of great pleasure or happiness. It then defines happiness as being “characterized by good luck.”
The Bible suggests there is a difference between happiness and joy. Paul, in 1 Thessalonians 5:16, tells us to “be joyful always.” If joy and happiness were the same thing, Paul would be telling us we should be blessed with good luck always. But we know this is not what Paul means. Instead, we are told to be joyful in spite of our circumstances.
Whereas happiness is momentary delight, joy is the steady overflow of a thankful heart. Whereas happiness is delight in our physical circumstances, joy is delight in God and his presence in our lives. Joy doesn’t come from good luck; instead, it springs from faith and hope. Because of this, we can live a life of joy in even the direst of circumstances.
Joy grows out of faith
Real joy grows out of the knowledge of God’s loving presence. Obviously, then, joy is developed in faith. This week’s reading reminds us of the source of our faith, Jesus’ sacrifice on the cross.
Zechariah’s prophecies about Jesus, made approximately 500 years before Jesus’ birth, give credence to our faith. He tells how God generously pours a spirit of grace and supplication over his children, despite our unworthiness (12:10). Then he tells how God purifies us—“On that day a fountain will be opened” to cleanse us from “sin and impurity” (13:1).
Joy cannot exist outside this cleansing. Neither can it flourish without full understanding of the cleansing’s value. But it is far too easy to treat salvation as an event in time, experienced in a moment and remembered only as evidence that we no longer need to fear eternity. This kind of faith will not give rise to joy.
Joy comes from the realization of God’s heartbreak because sin separates us from him. It comes from the understanding that separation from God is nothing less than death, yet God is willing to pay that penalty himself in order to restore us to him. Our greatest source of joy is the reality of our salvation.
Joy grows out of hope
Zechariah rightly calls us “prisoners of hope” (9:12). Faith is the doorway to salvation, but hope is our daily bread. Faith allows us to accept the gift of salvation, but hope gives us courage us to walk in it, regardless of our circumstances.
Hope also can lead us astray, however, if it isn’t anchored in truth. Initially we might be misled by the promises of salvation, taking them as solutions to life’s problems rather than solutions to our eternal problems. Although we are promised many things, we never are promised an easy life.
In fact, Jesus tells his followers: “Do not suppose that I have come to bring peace to the earth. I did not come to bring peace, but a sword. For I have come to turn ‘a man against his father, a daughter against her mother, a daughter-in-law against her mother-in-law’” (Matthew 10:34-35).
God doesn’t intend to be divisive, however. His purpose is two-fold. He wants to strengthen our faith and purify us. He wants us to reflect his glory and be filled with the fruit of his Spirit. God knows an easy life can make us lazy. He also knows our problems teach us to lean on him.
As Helen Keller said, “We could never learn to be brave and patient, if there were only joy in the world.”
Furthermore, our difficulties can have a purifying effect on us, working out such impurities as pride and selfishness—“I will refine them like silver and test them like gold. They will call on my name and I will answer them; I will say, ‘They are my people’ and they will say, ‘the Lord is our God.’” (13:9)
Finding joy in the midst of life
Faith and hope are supposed to be foundational concepts to the Christian life. Why, then, is joy so difficult to grasp? Perhaps we’re looking for it in the wrong places.
First of all, joy is not eternal happiness. Although it can feel like happiness, it may simply be the ability to smile in the midst of calamity. As Mother Teresa said: “Joy is prayer. Joy is strength. Joy is love. Joy is a net of love by which you can catch souls.”
Furthermore, the easy faith we casually talk about, being little more than head-knowledge, is often too shallow to produce joy. The kind of faith that produces joy is heart-knowledge. It isn’t composed of memorized facts and verses. Instead, it has been tested, tried and learned through experience.
And finally, wrong expectations can cause us to miss out on joy altogether. It’s easy to fall into the trap of measuring God’s love by the number and size of our blessings. But God never promised an easy life. He only promised peace and grace to endure the hardships as well as the good times.
So how do we find joy? We must follow Zechariah’s example and focus on the promises of God rather than our present circumstances. Life may be hard. It has its knocks and doesn’t always make sense. But we can rest assured that God has a plan and is in complete control.
Discussion questions
• How does joy differ from happiness?
• Have you ever experienced joy during a time of crisis?
• How can faith and hope inspire joy?
• What do you expect to receive from salvation? Have your expectations been met?

