Living In Faith
Living In Faith

Living In Faith

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Introducing ‘Silicon Spiritualities’
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Introducing ‘Silicon Spiritualities’

Introducing Silicon Spiritualities, a podcast from The Gospel Coalition exploring the deeper questions artificial intelligence raises about work, worship, truth, power, and what it means to be human. Host Christopher Watkin helps thoughtful Christians move beyond hype and panic toward a wise, hopeful, and biblically grounded understanding of the technologies shaping our world. REGISTER for our 6-week cohort, Get Ready for the Age of AI. JOIN the conversation on Discord, along with other Silicon Spiritualities listeners. Help The Gospel Coalition renew and unify the contemporary church in the ancient gospel: Donate today. Don’t miss an episode of Silicon Spiritualities with Christopher Watkin: Apple Podcasts Spotify YouTube TGC Updates

The Key to Happiness Is Self-Forgetfulness
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The Key to Happiness Is Self-Forgetfulness

“What in the world? Where are we?” My husband and I were incredulous. We’d reached our destination, but it wasn’t the bustling event center we’d expected. Instead, it was a yellowing field, barren except for the few cows who stood staring at us while chewing their cud. It was the early 2000s, and Mark and I were weary. We’d left our kids and demanding careers back in Japan and had flown to the United States to attend a conference that promised to quench our thirsty souls. An hour before arriving at this cow pasture, we’d paid extra for a GPS at the airport car-rental kiosk. Mind you, this was before smartphones, so this device resembled a walkie-talkie and gave us directions only audibly. But we figured the newfangled technology would outperform the printed directions we’d shoved in our suitcase a continent and ocean ago. We were wrong. We set out for a specific destination. We trusted the wisdom of the GPS. We listened and proceeded exactly as the voice instructed. Yet we arrived at the wrong place. As it turned out, the limited data available to GPS in its early days meant one address sometimes led to more than one location. Classic, right? No doubt something like this has happened to you too. You envisioned a specific destination, followed someone’s wisdom (maybe your own) to get there, but when you arrived, it wasn’t what you’d hoped for. So it is with happiness. We desperately want to be happy. We long for it, hunt for it, go to great lengths for it. But we struggle to arrive at our hoped-for happiness destination. What Is Happiness? The major dictionaries say happiness is something like “the feeling or showing of pleasure or contentment.” But if you look up “happy” in a thesaurus, you’ll find at least a dozen strong synonyms. If you’re happy, you may say you’re cheerful, delighted, ecstatic, glad, joyous, upbeat, content, peaceful, satisfied, serene, or even tickled pink. So many possible ways to express one elusive notion. We desperately want to be happy. We long for it, hunt for it, go to great lengths for it. But we struggle to arrive at our hoped-for happiness destination. In 1962, Charles Schulz, creator of the Peanuts comic strip, published Happiness Is a Warm Puppy. In this little book, Charlie Brown and his friends define happiness in simple ways. In one comic strip, Lucy says, “Happiness is a fuzzy sweater.” In another, Snoopy says, “Happiness is walking in the grass in your bare feet.” And in yet another, Linus claims, “Happiness is an ‘A’ on your spelling test.” No doubt each of these definitions made you smile, as they did me. But is happiness merely the feeling or showing of pleasure or contentment? Is it simply feeling good? Can we be happy just by holding a warm puppy or wearing a fuzzy sweater? If you’re going to search for happiness, how you define it matters. There’s a massive difference between momentary pleasure and lasting contentment, yet the dictionaries say happiness may involve both experiences. Truthfully, it’s lasting contentment we’re after, and the momentary buzzes we chase fall woefully short of that goal. Not Found in Seeking Self Our attempts at happiness are usually short-sighted because when happiness fades, we’re left disappointed. Whether it’s Schulz’s warm puppy, a career promotion, a new relationship, or the perfect day on vacation, the pleasure inevitably fades away. Pleasure’s temporary nature impedes our pursuit of lasting contentment. But more than that, our pursuit’s self-focused nature holds us back. “Do what makes you happy,” we say—emphasis on you. We look within ourselves and contemplate what will make us happy as individuals. “Will the puppy make me happy, or the fuzzy sweater? What do I need to be happy?” Yet this self-focus eventually sours, because it inevitably leads us to a selfish and sinful way of life. Sin is any thought, word, or deed “in opposition to God’s benevolent purposes for his creation. . . . [Sin] is the basic corrupting agent in the entire universe.” Sin plagues us all, and it particularly plagues our pursuit of happiness, because sin makes us unhappy. A self-focus may feel good for a time, but we all know the bad taste of a guilty conscience after a particularly selfish act, season of self-absorption, or misdeed at another’s expense. But if happiness isn’t found in pleasing ourselves, where can we find it? Made for More The counterintuitive truth in our quest for happiness is that the more we forget ourselves, the more we deny ourselves even, the happier we’ll be. Happiness is the result of self-forgetfulness. The less you and I put ourselves at the center, the more we center ourselves on God and other people, the happier we’ll be. Happiness can’t be achieved by pursuing it for its own sake, because it’s the overflow of a life lived with an outward focus. Happiness is the fruit produced by a life rooted in the deep soil of reality. And here’s what’s real: We have a Creator who made us to be eternally, immovably replete with happiness. So how do we get there? Just like my husband and I ended up at the wrong destination on our trip years ago, many of us have ended up at the wrong destination when it comes to happiness. As we did with the early version of GPS, you may have followed well-meaning instructions perfectly. But now you’re standing in a field, full of disappointment, and in need of a new set of directions. By God’s grace and provision, we have them. Where to Aim C. S. Lewis died as a well-known Christian writer and apologist, but he was first a skeptical atheist, then a theist, and only after that a follower of Christ. Lewis said one reason for our frustration with happiness is that we “fix our minds on this world.” He wrote, “Most people, if they had really learned to look into their own hearts, would know that they do want, and want acutely, something that cannot be had in this world. There are all sorts of things in this world that offer to give it to you, but they never quite keep their promise.” Lewis went on to describe how marriages, careers, and travel do indeed offer temporary happiness, but they inevitably leave us wanting something more. He finally concluded, “Aim at Heaven and you will get earth ‘thrown in’: aim at earth and you will get neither.” The counterintuitive truth in our quest for happiness is that the more we forget ourselves, the happier we’ll be. To aim directly for happiness is to miss it altogether. It’s to endlessly attempt to grasp the fuzz that keeps slipping away. It’s to expect lasting, internal satisfaction from passing, external circumstances. It’s to mistakenly believe that more self-focus will lead to more happiness. Yet when we pursue earthly happiness in and of itself, we miss it altogether. But what if we aim higher and farther than this earth has to offer? What if we look way beyond ourselves? What if we aim for heaven? Lewis claims that if we do, the happiness of earth will be thrown in. Real, genuine, lasting happiness on this earth is a by-product of looking away from ourselves and looking up to God.

Jesus Never Changes - Wholly Loved - July 6
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Jesus Never Changes - Wholly Loved - July 6

A personal author shares a heart-wrenching experience of betrayal by supposed Christian friends, but finds comfort in the timeless and unchanging nature of Jesus Christ, who remains a constant source of love, peace, and redemption. Through her own struggles and faith, Shellie Arnold encourages readers to take a deep breath and rest in this truth, finding solace in the enduring presence of God's Advocate, Deliverer, Redeemer, and Intercessor.

A Prayer to Encourage Worship While You Wait - Your Daily Prayer - July 6
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A Prayer to Encourage Worship While You Wait - Your Daily Prayer - July 6

When we worship while we wait, our focus shifts.

5 Myths You Need to Understand about OCD
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5 Myths You Need to Understand about OCD

OCD UK states that Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder is “the sixth largest contributor to non-fatal health loss globally.” Why is it non-fatal? Well, there are no formal, scientific publications to produce evidence of OCD-based deaths to say otherwise. However, just because it isn’t on paper doesn’t mean it’s not real. I know of someone who committed suicide after being unable to work though/live with this mental condition. The intrusive, debilitating thoughts that looped through her mind, over and over, stealing her ability to function, were simply too much. If you are experiencing suicidal thoughts or feel unsafe, reach out for immediate help. In the U.S., call or text 988 to connect with the Suicide & Crisis Lifeline.What OCD Really Feels LikeThis is my story. I was diagnosed with OCD in 2019 and have since been an advocate for others with the same mental condition. I’m well aware of the depressive thoughts and debilitating weight OCD places on the heart and mind. Truth be told, I was unable to keep a full-time job in my early twenties because of OCD. I’ve been in a car wreck because of a compulsive thought that I “needed” to give in to. I’ve been in therapy for years. If that isn’t enough, I’ve been labeled “depressed,” “anxious,” and suffering from a mental disorder that “has no cure.” Meanwhile, dishearteningly enough, in today’s society, even as mental health awareness is on the rise, people still casually throw around the (false) idea that they are “so OCD.” Whether they are trying to explain their need for order or desire to keep things clean, it’s a misconstrued, damaging idea. As a result, those who truly struggle with the disorder can easily assume they don’t have OCD since their struggles are so much deeper than the casual symptoms of desiring to color-coordinate one’s clothes. They don’t get the proper treatment and are only debilitated even further. OCD is not a preference for order or cleanliness; it is a serious mental health disorder marked by intrusive thoughts, compulsive responses, distress, and daily-life impairment.Why OCD Stereotypes Are Finally Being ChallengedNoah Kahan, an American singer-songwriter, has recently spoken about his fight against OCD, which has many people discussing the true nature of the disorder. Kahan told Rolling Stones, “I was under the influence of the idea that OCD was like, ‘I need to wash my hands a hundred times.’ But I didn’t realize how much more there was to it. I started putting all these pieces together from my childhood, and these different rituals I’ve had my whole life. It wasn’t just anxiety or being stressed. It was this real insidious disorder that I was struggling with.” He even opened up about his intrusive thoughts: “I was convinced something was happening that was not happening, or that I had said something that I just didn’t say… I could convince myself that I ran somebody over, knowing for a fact that I didn’t see another person on the road.” Thus, it only makes sense that we discuss how vital it is to dismantle OCD’s most common stereotypes so its true victims can find help and, most desirable, freedom:Photo Credit: Unsplash/Alexandra Gorn