🌿 Pursuing the Joy God Created for You
✨ Finding Your Safe Place in the Presence of Christ
📖 SCRIPTURE (NRSV)
Psalm 16:11
You show me the path of life. In your presence there is fullness of joy; in your right hand are pleasures forevermore.
John 10:10b
I came that they may have life, and have it abundantly.

🌱 DEVOTIONAL REFLECTION
For years, I believed my worth depended on how much I could carry. If everyone else was cared for, the bills were paid, and my children felt loved, I considered the day a success, even when I ended it exhausted and empty.
I became a mother at a young age and had three children by the age of twenty-three. When my first husband left during my third pregnancy, I learned to survive by becoming everything for everyone. I held our lives together the best I could, convinced that asking for help was a sign of weakness and that my own needs could wait.
Even after I remarried and built a loving life with my husband over the past thirty-one years, that mindset stayed with me. The fear of being left to carry everything alone never completely disappeared.
I still felt responsible for everyone else’s happiness and well-being.
When I read the opening words of Psalm 16:11, they speak directly to that weary part of me: “You show me the path of life.”
For years, I thought it was my job to create the path, protect the path, and carry everyone else along it. I believed I had to solve every problem before I could rest.
But God never asked me to hold everything together. He asked me to trust Him enough to let Him lead.
That trust has not come easily.
Even now, after thirty-one years of marriage, I sometimes catch myself slipping back into old patterns—trying to anticipate every need, fix every problem, and carry burdens that were never mine to hold.
Psalm 16 reminds me that I do not have to map out every step of my future. God sees the road ahead, even when I cannot.
The next words are the ones I return to most often: “In your presence there is fullness of joy.”
For a long time, I thought joy would come after everything was finished. After the children were grown. After the responsibilities eased. After I had finally earned the right to rest.
But life taught me something different.
There is always another responsibility. Another worry. Another task waiting to be done.
If joy depends on having an empty calendar or a problem-free life, it will always remain out of reach.
I stopped waiting for joy to arrive when life became easier. I started finding it in the quiet moments I spent with God.
I find it before sunrise with my Bible open beside a cup of coffee. I find it when I sit outside beneath the moonlight and pray. I find it while writing the words God places on my heart, hoping my story helps someone else feel less alone.
These moments remind me that I am more than the person everyone depends on.
The final phrase of Psalm 16:11 says, “At your right hand are pleasures forevermore.”
For years, I struggled to believe God wanted good things for me. I believed He wanted perseverance, sacrifice, and obedience—but I treated joy as something extra, something I could experience only after everyone else’s needs were met.
Even when I began setting aside time to write, pray, or simply sit quietly, I felt guilty. There was always another task waiting for me. Another person who needed something.
But this verse challenged that belief.
God is not asking me to ignore my own needs. He is reminding me that joy was never meant to be something I earned.
Jesus echoes this promise in John 10:10: “I came that they may have life, and have it abundantly.”
For years, I thought abundant life meant reaching a point where everything finally felt manageable.
Jesus offers something deeper than that.
Abundant life is knowing that even in the middle of uncertainty, grief, responsibility, and healing, we are never carrying our burdens alone.
It is receiving the gifts God places before us every day: rest, connection, purpose, healing, and joy.
Learning this has taken me years.
You may need this reminder today: you do not have to earn God’s joy.
You do not have to prove your worth by carrying more than you can bear.
You do not need permission to pursue the healing God is leading you toward.
You simply need to remain close to Him.
✍️ JOURNALING PROMPTS
- When did you first begin believing your worth was connected to what you do for others?
- What burdens are you carrying that God never asked you to hold?
- Where do you experience God’s presence most deeply?
- What simple moments restore your soul and remind you that you are loved apart from what you accomplish?
- What would change if you believed joy was a gift rather than a reward?
💛 CALL TO CONNECTION
Have you ever felt responsible for carrying more than you were meant to bear?
What are the small moments where you experience God’s presence and find joy?
Share your thoughts in the comments below. Your story may be the reminder someone else needs today.
🙏 CLOSING PRAYER
Loving God,
Thank You for showing me the path of life when I feel overwhelmed by responsibilities and expectations.
When I am tempted to carry burdens You never asked me to hold; remind me that I do not walk alone.
Teach me to find joy in Your presence rather than in my productivity. Help me release the guilt I feel when I rest and receive the gifts of peace, healing, and connection that You freely offer.
Guide me into the abundant life Jesus promises, and help me trust that Your love does not depend on what I accomplish but on who I am in You.
In Jesus’ name, Amen.