Because joy is anchored in God and our relationship with Him, it differs from happiness. Happiness is founded on sensations that provide temporary pleasure. People might seek happiness, yet happiness ebbs and flows depending on one's circumstances.
Happiness is a typical feeling associated with well-being. You should be joyful if things are going well in your life. This is a fairly materialistic perspective on happiness, yet it is typically correct. If it implies you can easily become happy, it also implies you may easily lose happiness. If something goes wrong, something breaks, or something does not go your way, your happiness is lost. Happiness is ephemeral; it may appear and vanish at any time, and it is reliant on things in this world that are as ephemeral. We can be happy for a variety of reasons, and there is nothing wrong with that; we only need to realize that happiness has not endured since what brings us happiness does not last.
Joy is found in something far more permanent than chocolate or any other temporary pleasure. Because joy is found in something so stable, you can experience it regardless of what is going on around you.
As a Christian, joy is something very different from happiness. Joy is a state of being content that comes from knowing Christ and is not reliant on the conditions of the world around us. Unlike the transient things of this world, joy is eternal when it is found in Christ. If our happiness lasts as long as the object in which we have placed happiness lasts, then our pleasure will not be temporary like pleasure when it is anchored in Christ. We may trust the Lord and find delight in him if we are rooted in Christ. The joy of the Lord may be found throughout Scripture, but it can also be seen in the lives of those who live in the joy of the Lord. When we appreciate all that God has done and created we may see the delight and experience it ourselves just by looking at it.
Joy and happiness are both feelings, not just thoughts; they are emotions, and it is what they are based on that distinguishes them. Joy is described as one of the fruits of the spirit, which indicates that the joy is an outflow of having the Holy Spirit in our lives as Christians. While happiness is based on our surroundings, joy is based on what we have inside us, particularly the Holy Spirit. Because each play out differently in our lives, people typically refer to happiness as transient and pleasure as permanent. The happiness derived from transient goods or occurrences does not stay long. Christians, on the other hand, find their delight in Christ, who never fails us.
Trials are genuine. Christians are confronted with difficulties. Nonetheless, the Bible tells us to rejoice over and over. It's vital to recall how God has worked in the past when we're having a hard time "calling it all joy" in the midst of hardships. Keep in mind what the Lord has accomplished. He is the same God who existed yesterday, today, and in the future. In the deepest valleys and most difficult moments of your life, God is with you. The Holy Spirit gives you the ability to move through tough situations with pleasure.