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The Daily Devotional
Wednesday, April 22, 2026
Joy That Remains
“By contrast, the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, generosity, faithfulness…” — Galatians 5:22
Reflection
When the Apostle Paul wrote to the churches in Galatia, he was addressing believers who were being pulled in two directions. On one side was the life shaped by human striving, self-indulgence, and spiritual confusion. On the other was the life formed by the Holy Spirit—a life marked not by performance, but by transformation. In that beautiful list of the Spirit’s fruit, joy appears near the beginning, nestled beside love and peace. Yet joy is often one of the most misunderstood gifts God gives. Many people think of joy as little more than happiness with a religious tone. They imagine it as the emotional reward of a good day, a peaceful season, or answered prayer arriving on time. But the joy Paul describes is deeper than that. It is not fragile, not dependent on pleasant circumstances, and not extinguished by sorrow. It is the quiet, enduring gladness that grows in the heart of a person who knows that God is near.
That is why biblical joy can survive in places where ordinary happiness cannot. Happiness rises and falls with the weather of our lives. It brightens when things go well and fades when pain enters the room. Joy, however, is born of something steadier. It is rooted in the presence of God. It is nourished by trust. It is strengthened by the unshakable truth that we belong to the Lord, and that even in hardship we are not abandoned. This is why Nehemiah could declare to a weary and grieving people, “the joy of the Lord is your strength.” He did not say joy would remove every burden, erase every ache, or solve every struggle. He said it would strengthen them. Joy is not always loud. Sometimes it does not sing; sometimes it simply endures. Sometimes joy is the soul’s way of standing upright when everything around it would seem to press it down.
I once heard of a pastor who regularly visited a shut-in parishioner during the final weeks of her life. She was confined to bed, suffering daily pain, and saw very few people beyond those who cared for her. From the outside, her life looked marked by loss, weakness, and limitation. Yet every time the pastor entered her room, she greeted him with the same radiant smile and the same gentle words: “Isn’t God good?” At first, he smiled and accepted her words as a gracious expression of faith. But over time, he found himself wondering how such joy could survive in such suffering. One day he asked her plainly, “How can you be so joyful in the midst of all this?” She did not offer a long explanation. She simply pointed to the small, worn Bible on her nightstand and said, “Because He’s still with me—and that’s more than enough.”
There is something holy in that answer. It cuts through all the shallow definitions we often attach to joy. Her joy was not denial. She was not pretending the pain was absent. She was not ignoring the loneliness of her condition. She was bearing witness to something greater than her suffering. She knew that Christ had not left her. She knew that the presence of God was more constant than the pain in her body, more enduring than the silence in the room, and more precious than the comforts she had lost. That is Christian joy. It is not anchored in ease, but in relationship. It is not rooted in what we have, but in Who holds us.
How often, though, do we tie our joy to the state of our circumstances? We tell ourselves we will be joyful when the bills are paid, when the diagnosis improves, when the family tension settles, when the news is better, when the future feels secure. We postpone joy, as if it were a luxury reserved for easier days. But the Spirit teaches us another way. Spirit-born joy does not wait for life to become simple. It springs up even in hard soil because its source is not the world’s approval or comfort, but the faithful nearness of God. Sometimes joy appears in obvious forms—laughter around the table, good news received, beauty breaking through an ordinary day. But often it comes quietly: in the peace that settles over us during prayer, in the strength to endure one more difficult morning, in gratitude for a small kindness, in the assurance that Christ remains beside us.
Today, perhaps the invitation is not to chase happiness, but to notice joy already at work in quieter ways. Notice it in the breath you have been given, in the Scriptures that still speak, in the mercies that still arrive, in the Savior who still remains. Notice it in the courage to keep going, in the trust that has not died, in the hope that flickers even when the sky is gray. Joy is not always exuberant; sometimes it is simply faithful. It is the settled confidence that God is good, that God is present, and that God will not fail His people.
As we abide in Christ, this fruit grows deeper. Over time, joy becomes more than a momentary feeling; it becomes a way of living. It steadies the heart, softens the spirit, and bears witness to a world hungry for something real. When joy takes root in us, it becomes both inward strength and outward testimony. Others may not always understand it, but they will sense that it comes from somewhere beyond us. And indeed it does. It comes from the Spirit of the living God, who teaches us to rejoice not because life is perfect, but because the Lord is faithful.
Prayer
Gracious and loving God, thank You for the gift of true joy—the kind that does not depend on easy circumstances, but flows from Your abiding presence. Teach us to seek our gladness in You rather than in the passing comforts of this world. In seasons of sorrow, be our strength. In days of weariness, remind us that You are near. Grow within us the fruit of joy so deeply that it steadies our hearts, brightens our witness, and helps us trust You more fully. May our lives reflect the quiet confidence that comes from walking with Christ, who is with us in every valley and every dawn. In Jesus’ name, Amen.
Devotional by: Kenny Sallee, ThM — Deming, NM, USA
The Bible texts are from the New Revised Standard Version (NRSV) Bible, copyright © 1989, 1993, the Division of Christian Education of the National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America. Used by permission. All rights reserved.
