When I was an Anglican priest I used to walk from my apartment over to church for evening prayer every day. On the way I would walk past the house of a Jehovahâs Witness. This particular JW was the sort of man who always had his hair combed, the car washed and probably went to be wearing a necktie.
Well he began to watch my daily walk and took to standing by his garden fence to try to engage me in conversation. Heâd say things like, âExcuse me, but have you ever thought that we might be living in the end times?â or âPardon me, but have you ever considered the prophecies of Daniel in light of the present situation in the European Community?â You know the sort of thingâŚ
I usually made a polite response and moved on, but one day I finally said, âYouâre a Jehovahâs Witness arenât you?â
âYes. Thatâs correct.â
âMay I just say that I am never going to become a Jehovahâs Witness. Never. And do you know why?â
He looked non plussed. âWhy is that?â
I laughed, âBecause my friend, you always look so miserable. If your religion hasnât made you happy why should I join it?â
He never appeared at the fence again.
I said âhappyâ but I should have said âjoyfulâ because joy and happiness are different qualities.
A person with a true religion is joyful. They have an inner peace and confidence that exudes from them even when they are not laughing and being outwardly joyful. They have joy even when they are in pain. They have an inner peace even if they are suffering from depression. They have a joy even if it is a dark joy.
One of the most consistently joyful people I ever met was a Poor Clare nun called Sister Mary Lucy. She was blind and had a deteriorating bone disease which meant that she was in constant excruciating pain. For decades. But she was always incredibly joyful.
There is a lot of religion out there and a lot of religious people, and if you ever want to ascertain whether this particular person, pastor or priest is the real deal, or whether this sect, religious group, special ecclesial community, Catholic sub group or pressure group within the church are the real deal give them the joy test.
Are these people joyful? Do they have a deep, abiding peace combined with a fountain of true joy in their lives? Do you like being around them? Are they real, loving, joyful, Spirit filled people?
They donât have to be perfect, but its not really that difficult.
Donât get me wrong. I am NOT saying that Christians always have to be externally, happy clappy, smug and satisfied and smiling all the time. We all know how fake that can be. Neither am I saying that people who are going through depression are not joyful Christians. I have known people in the midst of depression who have said, âEven here in the darkness, I know God is with me.â and that gave them a grim kind of joy.
Iâm referring to the sort of religious people who are constantly grim, always blaming others, always negative, always guilty.
They do not pass the joy test.
If they make you feel guilty, dirty and ashamed they do not pass the joy test. If they make you angry, aggressive and afraid they do not pass the joy test. If they make you blame others, see only the negative and tell you everyone else but them is wrong, they fail the joy test. If you feel down, afraid, guilty or resentful after being with them they do not pass the joy test.
If they do not pass the joy test theyâre poison.
Wave good bye and clear out of there.