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Wide Spaces and Narrow Paths: Finding Freedom in a Confined World

A Joy That Doesn’t Always Feel Like Joy



There are times in life when words like joy can feel slightly out of place.

We hear them, we read them, and we know they matter. Yet there are moments when they do not quite match our experience. Not because we disagree with them, but because life, as we are living it, feels very different. And it raises an honest question. What does joy really mean, when it does not feel like joy at all?

When Pain Takes Over Everything

Recently, I had toothache. Not just mild discomfort, but the kind that takes over completely, the sort that brings sleepless nights, constant throbbing, and deep, exhausting pain that is hard to ignore. It reminded me of something similar I experienced over twenty years ago. The intensity was the same. Once again, everything else seemed to fade into the background because this was all I could feel.

And during that time, I can honestly say this. I was not thinking, “This is wonderful.” I was not thinking, “I am really enjoying this.”
It was quite the opposite. I was tired, irritable, and at times thoroughly miserable.

Thankfully, I was able to get treatment and the problem was resolved. But while I was in it, there was nothing about the experience that felt joyful.

When Happiness Disappears

Experiences like that help to clarify something important. I do not think this is what the Bible means when it speaks about joy. If joy simply meant feeling happy in every moment, then something has gone wrong. There are situations where happiness quite naturally disappears. Pain, illness, grief, and stress shape how we feel, and that is part of being human.

In that sense, what I experienced was a loss of happiness, shaped by my circumstances. That makes sense.

The Kind of Joy Scripture Points To

But Scripture points us somewhere deeper. Nehemiah writes, “The joy of the Lord is your strength” (Nehemiah 8:10), and Jesus says, “My joy may be in you” (John 15:11). 

These words suggest that joy is not simply about how we feel in a moment. It is not the same as comfort, ease, or even happiness. It is something more deeply rooted than that.

Why this Can Feel So Difficult 

James writes, “Consider it pure joy whenever you face trials” (James 1:2). Taken at face value, that can feel confusing, especially when we place it alongside real experiences of pain. Surely we are not being asked to pretend that suffering is pleasant, or to ignore what we are going through.

Rather, it seems we are being invited to recognise that even in those moments, something else is still true. God has not stepped away. His presence is not dependent on our comfort, and his work in us does not stop when life becomes difficult.

Holding Honesty and Trust Together

Perhaps part of the challenge is learning to hold two things at once.
We can be honest and say, “This is hard. I do not like this. I wish it were different.” And at the same time, we can say, “God is still here, and I am learning to trust him.”

That may not feel like joy in the way we usually think about it. But it may be closer to what Scripture is pointing towards.

Where Joy Begins Again

The psalmist writes, “In your presence there is fullness of joy” (Psalm 16:11). Not in the absence of pain. Not in perfect circumstances. But in God’s presence. Which means joy is not something we have to force in every situation. It is something we return to, slowly and honestly, as we remain with him.

A Prayer

Lord, you know what it is like when life hurts.
When we are tired, irritable, and not at our best, help us not to pretend, but to bring all of this to you. In your presence, hold us, steady us, and gently remind us of a deeper joy that does not depend on circumstances.

A Quiet Hope

So perhaps joy is not always what we expect. It is not constant happiness or the absence of struggle. Often it is quieter than that, especially when life feels heavy. And yet it is not gone. Because joy is rooted in the presence of God, who remains with us. And even here, slowly and quietly, that deeper joy begins to return.
What does joy really look like when life hurts?

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