“Gratitude looks to the Past and love to the Present; fear, avarice, lust, and ambition look ahead.”
1 KINGS 1-2
2“I am about to go the way of all the earth,” he said. “So be strong, act like a man, 3and observe what the Lord your God requires: Walk in obedience to him, and keep his decrees and commands, his laws and regulations, as written in the Law of Moses. Do this so that you may prosper in all you do and wherever you go" (2:2-3)
JOURNAL
Lately I have been face to face with something that runs deeper than I want to admit: the pull to medicate and the desire to smooth out discomfort without having to walk through it. Addiction is not just about substances; it is about the universal human longing for peace, love, and harmony. We all want that, and when we find a way to feel it instantly without relationship, without effort, and without sacrifice, it becomes incredibly hard to resist. That is where the danger lives, because when we reach for something that gives us relief without requiring anything from us, we are not just escaping pain, we are slowly disconnecting from the very things that produce real joy.
At the same time, not all pleasure is the problem. God created enjoyment, rest, laughter, and even simple pleasures as good gifts. The distinction is not pleasure itself but the role it plays in our lives. Enjoyment that flows out of a healthy life, rooted in love, discipline, and relationship, strengthens us. But pleasure used to escape life, avoid growth, or replace what is real slowly weakens us. It becomes a substitute instead of a supplement, and that is where things begin to unravel.
God did not design us for shortcuts. He designed us so that love, meaningful work, and relationships, especially when they require sacrifice, actually shape us. They change us and even affect us physically. There is a reinforcement that happens in our minds and bodies when we choose what is good instead of what is easy, and that kind of joy does not spike and disappear but steadies and deepens over time. When we chase the chemical version of that feeling, whatever form it takes, we cheat the system, and cheating any system always comes with a cost. At first it feels like freedom and relief, but over time it hollows us out and leaves us shallow, dissatisfied, and searching for more of something that can never truly satisfy.
C.S. Lewis wrote that gratitude looks to the past and love to the present, while fear and desire are always reaching ahead, and that feels especially true when I think about addiction. Addiction pulls us out of the present and promises something better, easier, and immediate, but it never actually delivers life. Real life is found in the present, even when the present is hard. When I read about Adonijah trying to take the throne, I see someone grasping for control and trying to force an outcome instead of trusting God's design. It looked right on the surface, but it was disconnected from truth. In contrast, David’s charge to Solomon was simple: walk in obedience and stay aligned with what is true, trusting that this path, even when it is slower and harder, leads to life.
Peter felt this same tension. In the courtyard, sitting by the fire, faced with fear and pressure, he chose the immediate escape and denied Jesus to avoid pain. In that moment he medicated his fear with self-preservation, and it broke him, not because he was weak but because he stepped outside of truth to find relief. I see that same pattern in myself. Every time I look for a way to feel better that avoids the work of love, the risk of relationship, or the discipline of obedience, I am choosing a shortcut over something real, and it never leads where I hope it will.
The truth is that the present moment is where everything happens. It is where God meets us and where real joy is formed, not in escape or numbing or chasing a feeling, but in staying present, engaged, and connected to what is true even when it is uncomfortable. God is not found in the shortcuts; He is found in the process. He is found in the honest conversation, in the difficult decision, in choosing love when it would be easier to withdraw, and in the discipline of doing what is right when no one is watching. That is where joy lives. It is not loud or instant, but it is real and it lasts.
So today I remind myself that I am not looking for relief that costs me my depth, and I am not chasing peace that requires me to disconnect from truth. I am choosing the kind of life that is built, not manufactured. The kind of joy that comes from God cannot be faked, rushed, or replaced. The easy path will always be there calling for my attention, but I know where it leads, so I will stay here in the present, in the tension, and in the work, trusting that this is where real life begins.
Lately I have been face to face with something that runs deeper than I want to admit: the pull to medicate and the desire to smooth out discomfort without having to walk through it. Addiction is not just about substances; it is about the universal human longing for peace, love, and harmony. We all want that, and when we find a way to feel it instantly without relationship, without effort, and without sacrifice, it becomes incredibly hard to resist. That is where the danger lives, because when we reach for something that gives us relief without requiring anything from us, we are not just escaping pain, we are slowly disconnecting from the very things that produce real joy.
At the same time, not all pleasure is the problem. God created enjoyment, rest, laughter, and even simple pleasures as good gifts. The distinction is not pleasure itself but the role it plays in our lives. Enjoyment that flows out of a healthy life, rooted in love, discipline, and relationship, strengthens us. But pleasure used to escape life, avoid growth, or replace what is real slowly weakens us. It becomes a substitute instead of a supplement, and that is where things begin to unravel.
God did not design us for shortcuts. He designed us so that love, meaningful work, and relationships, especially when they require sacrifice, actually shape us. They change us and even affect us physically. There is a reinforcement that happens in our minds and bodies when we choose what is good instead of what is easy, and that kind of joy does not spike and disappear but steadies and deepens over time. When we chase the chemical version of that feeling, whatever form it takes, we cheat the system, and cheating any system always comes with a cost. At first it feels like freedom and relief, but over time it hollows us out and leaves us shallow, dissatisfied, and searching for more of something that can never truly satisfy.
C.S. Lewis wrote that gratitude looks to the past and love to the present, while fear and desire are always reaching ahead, and that feels especially true when I think about addiction. Addiction pulls us out of the present and promises something better, easier, and immediate, but it never actually delivers life. Real life is found in the present, even when the present is hard. When I read about Adonijah trying to take the throne, I see someone grasping for control and trying to force an outcome instead of trusting God's design. It looked right on the surface, but it was disconnected from truth. In contrast, David’s charge to Solomon was simple: walk in obedience and stay aligned with what is true, trusting that this path, even when it is slower and harder, leads to life.
Peter felt this same tension. In the courtyard, sitting by the fire, faced with fear and pressure, he chose the immediate escape and denied Jesus to avoid pain. In that moment he medicated his fear with self-preservation, and it broke him, not because he was weak but because he stepped outside of truth to find relief. I see that same pattern in myself. Every time I look for a way to feel better that avoids the work of love, the risk of relationship, or the discipline of obedience, I am choosing a shortcut over something real, and it never leads where I hope it will.
The truth is that the present moment is where everything happens. It is where God meets us and where real joy is formed, not in escape or numbing or chasing a feeling, but in staying present, engaged, and connected to what is true even when it is uncomfortable. God is not found in the shortcuts; He is found in the process. He is found in the honest conversation, in the difficult decision, in choosing love when it would be easier to withdraw, and in the discipline of doing what is right when no one is watching. That is where joy lives. It is not loud or instant, but it is real and it lasts.
So today I remind myself that I am not looking for relief that costs me my depth, and I am not chasing peace that requires me to disconnect from truth. I am choosing the kind of life that is built, not manufactured. The kind of joy that comes from God cannot be faked, rushed, or replaced. The easy path will always be there calling for my attention, but I know where it leads, so I will stay here in the present, in the tension, and in the work, trusting that this is where real life begins.
MATTHEW 6:31-3