A Worried Life

There is nothing better for a man than to eat and drink and tell himself that his labor is good. This also I have seen that it is from the hand of God.  For who can eat and who can have enjoyment without Him? Ecclesiastes 2:24-25 NASB

Enjoyment – There’s something odd about the Hebrew verb hush. It actually means, “to be agitated, to worry about.” The use in Ecclesiastes 2:25 is debated. “Ecclesiastes 2:25 is taken ‘enjoy’ by many commentators so that it inquires, ‘Apart from God who can eat or have enjoyment?’ on the basis of Eccl 2:24 and the Akkadian hashāshu ‘to be happy.’ Ellermeier, however, holds that the verb means ‘to worry,’ in the sense that God is responsible not only for situations which we enjoy but also those which cause us to worry.”[1] But this isn’t the only odd thing. The idea of enjoyment is a bit complicated.

Is there a difference between pleasure and enjoyment? The dictionary suggests that enjoyment is the “process of taking pleasure in something,” whereas pleasure is “a feeling of happy satisfaction or enjoyment.” These definitions seem to suggest that one is the synonym for the other. But I would like to propose a nuanced difference; a difference that I believe is crucial in understanding spirituality.

I would like to propose that pleasure is the feeling I get when something I do releases dopamine into my system. This release of organic neural transmitters produces emotional responses associated with rewards and pleasure. But I want to point out that this is an entirely self-functioning process. In other words, pleasure does not require engagement with anything or anyone other than my own neural pathways. I can please myself regardless of my circumstances or relationships.

Enjoyment, if I may so suggest, is conditioned on some outer connection. I can enjoy a glass of wine only if there actually is a glass of wine, but I can take pleasure in simply thinking about the glass of wine. More pointedly, I can only enjoy another person if I am engaged in a relationship with that person, but I can take pleasure from another person without actually being engaged with the other person at all. In other words, it is possible for me to use the other person as a pleasure-producing tool, but that is not the same as enjoying the presence of the other.

Our language blurs these small distinctions, but in my view, this is a mistake. It leads us to think that being pleased by another person is the same as enjoying the presence of the other person, and this is patently false as any serious reflection on the mechanics of relationship demonstrates. Lots of behaviors may provide me pleasure without necessarily requiring me to have any real involvement with any other person. My dopamine levels only require my creation of the pleasure, internal to me. Enjoyment demands I be outwardly engaged.

With this in mind, we can distinguish between happiness, pleasure and enjoyment. Happiness is entirely circumstantial. It is a function of my response to outer stimuli. If I have $100 in my pocket, I am happy. If I lose the $100 in my pocket, I am not happy. Pleasure, on the other hand, does not depend on my circumstances. The only thing necessary to experience pleasure is to build a neural pathway to release dopamine. Even if I lose the $100, I can still make myself feel pleasure by recalling some pleasing past event and using it to block my immediate circumstantial unhappiness. But neither of these, I believe, is true enjoyment. That requires more than circumstance and more than programmed neural pathways. Enjoyment requires that I enter into the present experience in such a way that I share who I am with the other, whether person or thing. This nuance is born out by the etymology of “enjoy,” derived from the Old French “to give joy, rejoice, take delight in.” Notice that enjoy is a verb of deliberate action, i.e., to give joy, to take delight in. One cannot rejoice while being unmoved. Enjoyment means giving and taking, and that requires bidirectional involvement.

How do we apply these nuances to biblical ideas?

First, it seems clear that the Bible is not interested in happiness. The biblical idea of joy does not depend on comfortable or rewarding circumstances. In fact, most of the time joy is experienced in the face of trials and tribulations. Happiness is out. It’s a nice surprise if it comes along, but it is not a biblical goal.

Second, it seems to be that pleasure is also not a biblical priority. The very fact that the apostolic writers avoid the use of the Greek eros should tell us that pleasure was not on their agendas. Pleasure is simply too self-seeking. Given the art of creative addiction, this is just far too obvious. The Bible does not promote pleasure because pleasure does not require engagement in relationship, and, above all else, the Bible is a story about relationships.

So then, it seems to me that the Bible is about enjoyment, and in the Old French sense, of giving and taking, of mutual involvement. Technically then, I may find pleasure in a glass of wine, but I only enjoy a glass of wine when it engages me with another. Solo drinking may be pleasure, but it is not enjoyment. Crucially then, we are to enjoy God, not seek pleasure in Him, His creation or anyone else. Seeking pleasure opens the door to dopamine channeling and that leads directly to self-absorption. Seeking enjoyment means voluntarily giving myself to another, giving something of me away so that the other will also discover enjoyment. If I seek to enjoy God, I am required to enter into a give-and-take engagement with God. It might not even be pleasurable. It might not bring happiness. But it will lead to joy and that surpasses them all.

Finally, I take this to mean that when Paul speaks about love, he is speaking about a love of enjoyment. And that is ultimately what separates us from the robotic self-seeking addictive behaviors to bring about pleasure. Love demands submission to another. It can’t function any other way. If I am going to enjoy God, I will have to open myself to Him and become vulnerable to His presence.

Topical Index: pleasure, enjoyment, happiness, hush, worry, Ecclesiastes 2:24-25

[1] Yamauchi, E. (1999). 632 חוּשׁ. In R. L. Harris, G. L. Archer, Jr. & B. K. Waltke (Eds.), Theological Wordbook of the Old Testament (R. L. Harris, G. L. Archer, Jr. & B. K. Waltke, Ed.) (electronic ed.) (274). Chicago: Moody Press.

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Mark N

“First, it seems clear that the Bible is not interested in happiness. ” Not sure about that Skip.

What about Strong’s H835 – ‘esher? Definition:אֶשֶׁר ʼesher, eh’-sher; from H833; happiness; only in masculine plural construction as interjection, how happy!:—blessed, happy.
CJB
Ps 106:3 How happy are those who act justly,
who always do what is right!
Ps 119:1-2 How happy are those whose way of life is blameless,
who live by the Torah of Adonai!
2 How happy are those who observe his instruction,
who seek him wholeheartedly!

laurita hayes

Oh, wow, Skip, you just altered my dictionary forever! I am going to have fun all day on this one.

It takes strength to survive in this world. If you do not personally possess that strength, you have to at least try to surround yourself with it. What are we having to fight? Death. Love is stronger than that death and is what we must have, or at least think we have, to resist it. All the substitutes for love that we employ are attempts to avoid death. The problem with the love substitutes that sin hands us is that they just trade one form of death for another, but I digress.

Love makes us strong, but joy is the gluteous maximus of the love muscles. When I have nothing left but pure love to run on – when all else has failed and there are no other options, but love will still have it no other way, that is when joy shows up. But when the occasion occurs for no other reason than just simple love, that is also when joy shows up. In circumstances free for engagement and pleasant to the max as well as circumstances most dire, then, joy suffers no impediment.

Joy occurs when there are no extenuating ‘reasons’ left. When all the manipulation ceases and it has become too ‘expensive’ to attempt the situation for any other purpose – when love becomes pure duty because there are no more other reasons, but love still would have it no other way, that’s when joy shows up and turns on the afterburners. Oh, boy! Once you get the bit of that joy in your teeth – joy in the face of adversity: joy that does not care how wrong you may be going about it or how dire the situation may be – joy that love is still getting its way, you will never stop. This is the joy of the Lord, and it is amazing!

Joy is what is left when there is nothing left but love – when there is nothing between me and my Calvin Klein’s – I do mean the engagement of love. You will know it when you get there.

laurita hayes

Well, what else do we run on?

Carl Roberts

Duty, Drudgery or Delight?

~ Let those who favor My righteous cause and have pleasure in My uprightness shout for joy and be glad and say continually, Let the LORD be magnified, Who takes pleasure in the prosperity [shalom] of His servant ~

~ *You* shall love [abad -work-worship-love-serve] the LORD your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your might ~ (Deuteronomy 6.5)

Who is *you? Are *you talking to *me? Am *I to love the LORD *my God with ALL *my heart-soul-strength? Was this very first command for *them (then) or is it for *us (now)?

May we *personalize” the Scriptures? Who are these ten commandments (they are not suggestions btw) for? *Them or *us? [or both?]

Friend, *anything” I love more than God is an idol – whatever that *thing” may be! He is to have and to hold not a prominent place, but the preeminent place in my heart. God is to be *Number One” (Thou my best thought by day or by night) at all times and in all places, and *I am to love the LORD *my God.. — always! and at all times!! ~ Rejoice in the LORD [when?] Always. Amen.

I am a man. (hello). What is, according to the Scriptures, —the whole duty of man? It is to “fear God and to keep His commandments” – What does Solomon (the second wisest man who ever lived) have to say?

~ Now all has been heard; here is the conclusion of the matter:
Fear God and keep His commandments, for this is the duty of all mankind.~ (Ecclesiastes 12.13)

Solomon, – may I inquire? To keep the commandments of the One I love and to do His will, would this be considered- duty, drudgery or delight?

According to Him, the One who of God is made unto unto wisdom and righteousness, and sanctification and redemption, —*I delight to Your will, O *my God.. and it pleases me to please Him. True friendship!

These are the words of our Savior to His disciples – (Are we also His disciples?)

~ In that day *you will know that I am in My Father, and you in Me, and I in *you. “He who has My commandments and keeps them is the one who loves Me; and he who loves Me will be loved by My Father, and I will love him and will disclose (reveal) Myself to him.” ~ (John 14.20,21)

Is Christ, the hope of glory in *you? (Colossians 1.27)

George Kraemer

I lost $60 this week between the cash register and the car. I was sad but I thought maybe someone who found it needed it a lot more than me. I was happy. Four years ago I took great pleasure in finally having the time to seek. I found Skip and this web site and every day it brings joy to me to know that I can wake up to a new TW and all the comments that it brings. I am born from above everyday. Thank you Skip.

Stephen C

Skip I am so grateful for this space and Lauretta thank you for your encouragement and joy. Joining in this challenge of commitment on January1st, the depths we are touching and having just finished the “Crossing” book I feel like my yetser hara is singing “No Where to Run No Where To Hide” (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fhcflDSUMvc) my yetser hatov is singing “Killing Me Softly” (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qMzzw6IXH1s) and the Spirit of God is singing Let’s Get Ready To Rumble (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VOvDTCbcHe0) . I write this squirming and smiling simultaneously and hold on to all your encouragements.

Thank you and Thanks to all!

Stephen C

Laurita…..sorry for the misspelling….

laurita hayes

Thanks, Stephen, you got it righter than many, and I liked your song progression! LOL!

Stephen C

Would be pleased too…oh would enjoy it…ahh ok Id love too (lol)

Stephen C

Where would you like me to post something for you to look at?

Craig Borden

If there is a Biblical “happiness” it is to me a result of choice, not circumstance. Choosing to do His will. Choosing to accept life on lifes terms. Choosing to die to my way. Which means ironically that happiness is not about me at all, is it?

David Williams

If I am honest with myself, looking over my journey to date, I will admit I sought solace in whatever would bring the most happiness and pleasure to me, in any given moment. We are all self-centered that way, though some will take great exception to such generalization, even though it probably is as obvious to another, as the nose on their face. But then, “Nothing is so difficult as not deceiving oneself.” –Ludwig Wittgenstein. Most often I blurred the lines between happiness, pleasure and my perceived enjoyment, not really knowing the difference and not really caring. I realize now that they are not the same and may in fact not be coterminous. Happiness and pleasure are easy to grasp. Enjoyment can be quite a different story. Enjoyment can require some degree of real work, real sweat and real tears. God is in the business of encouraging enjoyment. He wants to interface with his creatures, you and I, and that joining can be harsh and bumpy, but always in the direction of what is best for us, best for ones’ self and best for all the other image bearers in his good creation. So I am trying to “count it all joy”, all of it, and really enjoy what really is “a lovely ride.” Embrace the interface.