

Happiness [Alcorn, Randy] on desertcart.com. *FREE* shipping on qualifying offers. Happiness Review: Solid biblical truth on a subject that shouldn't be controversial - Randy Alcorn does an incredible and thorough job integrating happiness with sincere Christian belief and living. Could satan have created happiness? No, he only twists and distorts what's good and is committed to our unhappiness. So happiness is from God, as is every good and perfect thing. So the question is, not is happiness a good or bad thing, but how you handle it and understand it so you can enjoy maximum happiness without it tipping over into ungodliness. This is the book to give you this understanding and ultimately the freedom to enjoy so many things in their appropriate way. Review: An Opus on Happiness - This book will be most appreciated by those who desire an in-depth look into happiness and joy, the difference between happiness and joy, and settling the age-old debate concerning whether God is happy or wrathful and whether or not He wants His children to be happy. The historical teachings in the church that a Christian should have Joy but That happiness is short-lived and not necessary to the Christian faith is absolutely debunked. I must say that the reader will have to exercise tenacity in sticking to this very extensive treatise that will address the issues of having happiness and joy on equal footing. But, I must say that slowly, through the course of painstaking exactitude in word study, the reader's mind can change in its concepts to realize that Christianity is commensurate wit happiness that prompts smiles, laughs, giggles, and enthusiastic embracing of a good, loving, and happy Father. Being a Cross Bearing Christian, scowling, anticipating a negative encounter with Jesus when He returns, being painfully sacrificial, and not enjoying one's faith are simply lies of the evil one. If you read this book with an open mind, allow a scholarly weighing of truth and error, and let the Holy Spirit guide you into the Living Word of Scripture, you will be changed in your view of God, His Word, and His will for our lives. My wife and I read this book aloud and then prayed. It was a worth endeavor.
| ASIN | 1414389345 |
| Best Sellers Rank | #245,153 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #164 in Christian Bible Exegesis & Hermeneutics #2,690 in Christian Spiritual Growth (Books) #4,631 in Christian Theology (Books) |
| Customer Reviews | 4.7 4.7 out of 5 stars (234) |
| Dimensions | 6.2 x 1.3 x 9.1 inches |
| Edition | Unabridged |
| ISBN-10 | 9781414389349 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-1414389349 |
| Item Weight | 1.75 pounds |
| Language | English |
| Print length | 496 pages |
| Publication date | October 1, 2015 |
| Publisher | Tyndale Momentum |
J**N
Solid biblical truth on a subject that shouldn't be controversial
Randy Alcorn does an incredible and thorough job integrating happiness with sincere Christian belief and living. Could satan have created happiness? No, he only twists and distorts what's good and is committed to our unhappiness. So happiness is from God, as is every good and perfect thing. So the question is, not is happiness a good or bad thing, but how you handle it and understand it so you can enjoy maximum happiness without it tipping over into ungodliness. This is the book to give you this understanding and ultimately the freedom to enjoy so many things in their appropriate way.
M**E
An Opus on Happiness
This book will be most appreciated by those who desire an in-depth look into happiness and joy, the difference between happiness and joy, and settling the age-old debate concerning whether God is happy or wrathful and whether or not He wants His children to be happy. The historical teachings in the church that a Christian should have Joy but That happiness is short-lived and not necessary to the Christian faith is absolutely debunked. I must say that the reader will have to exercise tenacity in sticking to this very extensive treatise that will address the issues of having happiness and joy on equal footing. But, I must say that slowly, through the course of painstaking exactitude in word study, the reader's mind can change in its concepts to realize that Christianity is commensurate wit happiness that prompts smiles, laughs, giggles, and enthusiastic embracing of a good, loving, and happy Father. Being a Cross Bearing Christian, scowling, anticipating a negative encounter with Jesus when He returns, being painfully sacrificial, and not enjoying one's faith are simply lies of the evil one. If you read this book with an open mind, allow a scholarly weighing of truth and error, and let the Holy Spirit guide you into the Living Word of Scripture, you will be changed in your view of God, His Word, and His will for our lives. My wife and I read this book aloud and then prayed. It was a worth endeavor.
C**S
changed my mind about distinguishing between joy and happiness
Randy Alcorn does an excellent study of joy and happiness in the scriptures. He draws the reader’s attention to practically every use of words that relate to these human expressions and essentially convinces me that I shouldn’t point to happiness as an emotional expression as distinguished from joy
E**R
Two books for the price of one!
I originally got the Happiness book on Audible because I enjoy listening vs reading. However, I really wanted to have the Bible verses quoted accessible, so ordered a hardcopy! Beautiful book, so many reasons to be happy and the company who mailed it added a bonus book, called Happy Church. This delighted me and I'm excited to read this book too. Great value for my money and made the wait to receive it via media mail worth the wait. Thank you. If you're struggling with finding joy or happiness then give this book a go. It helped me after a challenging year - lost my home due to Hurricane Ian, diagnosed with breast cancer, not being able to visit my family in the UK. I was dealing with a lot!
S**.
Great stuff, very beneficial, and something that every Christian should know and practice, albeit a bit long
This book is solid Scripturally and uses many quotes from church fathers such as Anselm, Puritans such as Thomas Watson, and modern teachers such as John Piper, C.S. Lewis, and Chesterson. It is a needed subject and very challenging and beneficial to my Spiritual walk. There are practical applications, such as how to be purposeful about your happiness. It does; however, wax a little too long and is almost too encompassing. I found myself rolling my eyes at "another story about his dog" and he goes overboard with quotes and stories. I know why he does this, but the end result is a book that is probably one hundred pages longer than needed. Alcorn is great and I am better for reading the book, so I definitely do not want to dissuade anyone from reading it because it is a subject that is very needed. If reading an extra hundred pages is the price of benefiting from his work, then it is totally worth it.
M**E
God's absolute Holiness 'and' Happiness!
An indescribable life changing book on God's eternal happiness! Once again Randy has written an exhaustive, well written, Scripturally sound book. Again what must be a lifetime of Randy's study. This book is jam packed with Scriptural evidence. It is also jam packed with what the greatest authors, preachers, teachers and Saints, new and old have to say about happiness. I found the multitude of Hebrew and Greek words used for God's happiness and the real happiness God has for each of us astounding. Yes, God is "Happy & Holy" in the most profound sense of meaning of 'each' of these word!
B**1
Masterful and Paradigm-Shifting
Wow. WOW! From the introduction, this is a paradigm-shifting book. The old preacher quote goes, "God wants you to he holy, not happy." Randy Alcorn spends nearly 500 pages discussing why we don't have to choose to be holy OR happy. It's long, yes. But I loved every page. I cried multiple times. Tears of joy. Thinking about my God's desire for me joy in Him. It's thorough. Biblical references everywhere. Amazing quotes from Christians (old and new) abound, all of which are very helpful. Honestly, this is a masterpiece of modern biblical literature. Highly recommended
J**R
Happiness Highly Recommended
Randy Alcorn has given Christians a tremendous gift in Happiness. The sheer amount of research involved in compiling this tome is highly appreciated. Though the book might be criticized for being unnecessarily long and repetitive in spots, Alcorn makes up for this by providing relatively short, happiness-producing chapters (I found this to be literally true) that serve as top-notch daily devotional material. Plus, Happiness provides help for the Church and the world well through spotlighting an area of Christian doctrine that is dramatically lacking and terribly misunderstood, namely, that "God is happy, and he wants us to be happy too."
H**L
*** Ich habe die erste Hälfte des Buches gelesen. Es ist ein Buch, das ich in zeitlichen Abständen wieder hervornehme, denn es nährt und sättigt meine Seele. *** “Seeking happiness is a given—a universal constant. It’s present in every person of every age, era, and circumstance.” Wer schreibt? Randy Alcorn, bekannter Autor zum Thema „Himmel“, hat sich durch ein weiteres Grundthema geackert. Die Suche nach der Freude ist so natürlich wie das Atmen! Davon ist er überzeugt. Der Theologe hat sich zeit seines Lebens für ein auf Jesus gerichtetes Leben in der Freude und Fülle beschäftigt – und es selbst auch in die Tat umgesetzt. Über seine eigene „Vor-Erfahrung“ auf der Suche nach der wahren Freude schreibt er: „Ich habe einige tiefe Erinnerungen an meine Kindheit und die idealistischen Träume meines frühen Lebens. Aber als ich jedoch ein Teenager war, fühlte ich mich desillusioniert und leer - obwohl die meisten, die mich kannten, es von aussen nicht erraten hätten. Ich wuchs fast ohne Wissen von Jesus, Gott, dem Evangelium, der Bibel und der Kirche auf. Mein Vater besaß Wirtshäuser und betrieb Amusements, die Spielautomaten für solche Betriebe lieferten und unterhielten. Vor der Zeit von Computer- und Videospielen bin ich in einem Haus aufgewachsen, das mit Tischtennis- und Billardtische, Flipper und Bowlingmaschinen gefüllt war. Sogar in meinem Schlafzimmer standen zwei Musikboxen. (Mein Haus war deshalb ein beliebter Treffpunkt für meine Freunde!) Diese Vergnügungsautomaten waren entworfen worden, um Menschen glücklich zu machen. Doch niemand in meiner Familie war glücklich. Für meine Eltern war es die zweite Ehe. Jedes Mal, wenn Papa betrunken nach Hause kam und er und Mom sich gegenseitig anschrien, lag ich im Bett und fragte mich, ob dieser Kampf in einer Scheidung enden würde. In der Junior High School bekam ich gute Noten, gewann Preise, spielte Quarterback und wurde zum Team-Captain und Student Body President ernannt, aber ich war nicht glücklich. Ich erlebte jeweils kurz den Vorgeschmack von Glück, aber ich verbrachte viel mehr Zeit damit, Glück zu suchen und mich danach zu sehnen, als es erlebt zu haben. Ich kaufte hunderte von Comics, abonnierte Fantasy- und Science-Fiction-Magazine und verbrachte Nächte damit, durch mein Teleskop zu schauen und über das Universum nachzudenken.“ Wie liest sich das Buch? Es sind 500 Seiten, in denen sich der Autor im ewigen Glück „badet“. Er betrachtet es eingehend von allen Seiten. Das heisst, er kann bei Begriffen über Seiten und Kapitel verweilen. Er betrachtet das Thema aus unterschiedlichen Perspektiven. Jedes Kapitel beginnt mit Zitaten aus Bibel und Literatur. Er baut viele Anekdoten aus dem eigenen Leben und aus seinem Lesestoff mit ein. Jemand hat dieses Buch als „Theologie des Glücks“ bezeichnet. Kratzt er theologisch an den Grenzen? Vielleicht, ab und zu. Doch er tut es – wie auch in seinem Buch über den Himmel – nie, ohne auf die andere Meinung hingewiesen und seine Begründung aus der Bibel gegeben zu haben. Wie ist das Buch theologisch abgestützt? Das Buch ist getränkt von biblischen Aussagen. Ich habe einige wichtige Belegstellen zusammengetragen und gebe sie im vollen Wortlaut wieder: Du tust mir kund den Weg zum Leben: Vor dir ist Freude die Fülle und Wonne zu deiner Rechten ewiglich. (Psalm 16,11) Lass deiner sich freuen und fröhlich sein alle, die nach dir fragen; und die dein Heil lieben, lass allewege sagen: Der HERR sei hochgelobt! (Psalm 40,16) Wohl dem Volk, das jauchzen kann! HERR, sie werden im Licht deines Antlitzes wandeln; sie werden über deinen Namen täglich fröhlich sein und in deiner Gerechtigkeit herrlich sein. (Psalm 89,16-17) Dein Brunnen sei gesegnet, und freue dich der Frau deiner Jugend. (Sprüche 5,18). So geh hin und iss dein Brot mit Freuden, trink deinen Wein mit gutem Mut; denn dein Tun hat Gott schon längst gefallen. Lass deine Kleider immer weiß sein und lass deinem Haupte Salbe nicht mangeln. Genieße das Leben mit der Frau, die du lieb hast, solange du das eitle Leben hast, das dir Gott unter der Sonne gegeben hat; denn das ist dein Teil am Leben und bei deiner Mühe, mit der du dich mühst unter der Sonne. (Prediger 9,7-9) Denn wie ein junger Mann eine Jungfrau freit, so wird dich dein Erbauer freien, und wie sich ein Bräutigam freut über die Braut, so wird sich dein Gott über dich freuen. (Jesaja 62,5) Dein Wort ward meine Speise, sooft ich's empfing, und dein Wort ist meines Herzens Freude und Trost; denn ich bin ja nach deinem Namen genannt, HERR, Gott Zebaoth. (Jeremia 15,16). Seid fröhlich und jubelt; es wird euch im Himmel reichlich belohnt werden. Denn ebenso haben sie verfolgt die Propheten, die vor euch gewesen sind. (Matthäus 5,12) Fürchtet euch nicht! Siehe, ich verkündige euch große Freude, die allem Volk widerfahren wird; denn euch ist heute der Heiland geboren, welcher ist Christus, der Herr, in der Stadt Davids. (Lukas 2,10-11) Ich bin gekommen, damit sie das Leben haben und volle Genüge. (Johannes 10,10) Bisher habt ihr um nichts gebeten in meinem Namen. Bittet, so werdet ihr empfangen, auf dass eure Freude vollkommen sei. (Johannes 16,24) Als das die Heiden hörten, wurden sie froh und priesen das Wort des Herrn, und alle wurden gläubig, die zum ewigen Leben bestimmt waren. … Die Jünger aber wurden erfüllt von Freude und Heiligem Geist. (Apostelgeschichte 13,48+52) Freut euch mit den Fröhlichen, weint mit den Weinenden. (Römer 12,15) Seid allezeit fröhlich, betet ohne Unterlass, seid dankbar in allen Dingen; denn das ist der Wille Gottes in Christus Jesus für euch. (1. Thessalonicher 5,16-18)
G**S
This is an indepth study on Christians and happiness. I quote what is written on the cover of the book: "While Christians shouldn't deny or ignore suffering, we should be so energized by contagious joy and radiate such inner happiness, peace, and contentment that others are attracted to what we have in Christ. Yet, Christians are often perceived as angry, judgmental and duty driven. Why aren't we happier? Unfortunately, many believers are taught that God wants us to be holy but not happy and that joy and happiness are fundamentally different. We've even been left with the impression that God himself isn't happy. Yet nothing could be further from the truth!" Alcorn uses scripture and the writings of Christians from former centuries to reveal the truth of Who God really is regarding happiness and what He has in His heart for us. A surprising, life-changing perspective for me. I'm so glad I read all of this study and I believe every Christian today would benefit by this amazing book.
P**O
The words 'joy' and 'happy' are synonymous in the bible. I am very encouraged having read this book. Highly recommend it
M**R
As someone who has struggled with the “life has to be a struggle and then you die and are rewarded” Christian mentality this book really helped me to reframe those subconscious beliefs. I have read two of his books but didn’t finish either of them. There is a lot of useful information but I do find his books to be a bit repetitive which in my opinion makes them longer than they need to be. But overall I enjoyed this book and the message that we are meant to be happy here on earth.
Trustpilot
Hace 1 mes
Hace 2 semanas