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Dwelling in Joy: From Imagination to the Gospel

November 20, 2025

By Joseph Vasquez

Six years ago, I walked onto Fresno Pacific鈥檚 campus as a freshman.

I was nervous, excited and unsure of what college would hold. I didn鈥檛 know anyone yet, and I certainly didn鈥檛 imagine I鈥檇 one day be speaking in chapel.

Looking back now, I realize that even in those moments of uncertainty, God was already writing my story in ways I couldn鈥檛 see.

That realization sparked something I鈥檝e carried with me ever since: the stories we live in鈥攁nd the ones we love to hear鈥攑oint us to something greater.

Why We Love Happy Endings

Think about the stories that stay with us. They鈥檙e often the ones where good triumphs over evil, where despair suddenly turns into joy. Why do happy endings move us so deeply?

I first wrestled with that question in a small classroom in Sattler Hall, where I encountered the world of J.R.R. Tolkien鈥攊mmortal elves, stubborn dwarves, hairy-footed hobbits. More than fantasy, Tolkien鈥檚 stories gave me a piercing glimpse of something greater.

Later, I came across these words from C.S. Lewis: 鈥If I find in myself a desire which no experience in this world can satisfy, the most probable explanation is that I was made for another world鈥 (Mere Christianity).

That line helped me see why those stories stirred me so much. Maybe our love for happy endings isn鈥檛 about escaping into another world at all, but about recognizing a longing for the true story we were created to live in.

A Glimpse of Joy

Tolkien believed that the best stories give us what he called a 鈥piercing glimpse of joy.鈥 It鈥檚 that sudden, unexpected moment when the story seems lost, and then, in a heartbeat, it turns toward hope. He even coined a word for it: eucatastrophe鈥攁 鈥済ood catastrophe,鈥 or the joyful reversal no one saw coming.

You can see it all over his works: the Riders of Rohan arriving at dawn to break the siege of Helm鈥檚 Deep, or the Eagles sweeping down to rescue Bilbo and the dwarves. Even Star Wars has its eucatastrophe when Han Solo swoops in at the last moment so Luke can destroy the Death Star.

These aren鈥檛 just clever plot twists. They鈥檙e moments that make our hearts leap because they echo something deeper. They awaken in us a longing for light breaking into darkness鈥攏ot only in fiction but also in reality.

The True Beginning

That鈥檚 where Scripture steps in. John鈥檚 Gospel begins: 鈥The light shines in the darkness, and the darkness has not overcome it鈥 (John 1:5).

John introduces the Word as the source of life and light, present with God from the very beginning. And then comes the surprise: 鈥淭he Word became flesh and dwelt among us鈥 (John 1:14).

What amazed me as I reflected on that is how unexpected it was. The King didn鈥檛 arrive with armies or fanfare. He came in humility, born in a manger and choosing to walk alongside the poor, the captive, the blind and the broken.

From Sorrow to Joy

His mission didn鈥檛 unfold the way anyone expected. Isaiah had pictured him long before as 鈥渁 man of sorrows, familiar with grief鈥 (Isaiah 53:3). Jesus carried our burdens and entered into our suffering. For a moment, it seemed like the Light had been extinguished.

And then鈥攖he great turn.

On the third day, the tomb was empty. The stone was rolled away. Angels declared, 鈥He is not here; He has risen!鈥 (Luke 24:6).

Reflecting on this, Tolkien once said: 鈥The Resurrection is the eucatastrophe of the Incarnation.鈥 The deepest sorrow became the greatest joy. Death itself was undone.

Living in the Story

So why do we love happy endings? Because deep down, we know this world is broken, and we long for more. Stories awaken that longing, but Scripture shows us why it exists: we were made for joy in Christ.

Here at 榴莲视频直播, I鈥檝e learned that we鈥檙e invited to live in that story together鈥攏ot just in classrooms or chapels, but in community, in worship and in the everyday rhythms of life.

The resurrection isn鈥檛 just a past event. It鈥檚 the great turn of history, and we live in its light even now.

An Invitation to Joy

For me, that changes everything. Joy isn鈥檛 something to leave behind in chapel or in stories that stir our hearts; it鈥檚 something we鈥檙e called to carry with us.

Because one day, the story will find its final fulfillment. And when it does, it will surpass every 鈥渉appily ever after鈥 we鈥檝e ever imagined.

Until then, we鈥檙e invited to live with imagination wide open, seeing in every glimpse of joy a reminder that the Gospel is the truest story of all.

This content was adapted from a devotional shared on September 24, 2025 during Chapel.

Photo of Joseph Vasquez

Joseph Vasquez

Admission Counselor

Joseph Vasquez (BA '23) is an Admissions Counselor at 榴莲视频直播 who enjoys connecting with students and sharing what makes 榴莲视频直播 special. He鈥檚 passionate about faith, storytelling and encouraging others to see how God鈥檚 grace shapes every season of life. Outside of work, he serves in youth ministry at his church and loves spending time with his wife, especially when they鈥檙e nerding out over their favorite sci-fi and fantasy worlds.

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