Restore to me the joy of your salvation and grant me a willing spirit, to sustain me.
There was a time when your heart burned for God. Do you remember it?
You couldn’t wait to read the Bible. Prayer felt natural. Worship felt alive. Even small moments with God felt powerful. There was a deep joy—not because life was perfect, but because you knew you were saved, forgiven, and loved.
But slowly, life happened. Disappointments came. The busyness of work crept in. Prayers seemed like just words and felt unanswered. Sin crept in quietly. Routine replaced relationship. And without even realizing it, the joy began to fade. You are still a believer; you still go through the motions, but something is missing. That joy is gone.
David understood this feeling deeply. After his sin, he didn’t just ask God for forgiveness, he cried out, “Restore to me the joy of your salvation.”
Why? Because losing that joy is dangerous. The joy of your salvation is not just an emotion—it is your spiritual strength. When that joy fades, something else quietly enters. Doubt begins to whisper, “Are you really saved? Has God really forgiven you?”
Fear follows close behind with “What if things don’t work out?” and “What if God is not with me?” Anxiety settles in your heart, and this is exactly what the enemy wants. He doesn’t always attack your salvation directly. Instead, he attacks your joy. Because if he can take away your joy, he can weaken your faith. A joyful believer is strong. A joyless believer is vulnerable.
Think of your mobile phone with a full battery. When it is fully charged, it works perfectly. You can make calls, send messages, navigate your way—everything functions as it should. But when the battery drains to near zero, the phone becomes unreliable. It slows down. Apps crash. Eventually, it shuts off completely.
Your joy is like that battery. When your joy in Christ is full, your faith is strong, you trust God easily, and you stand firm in trials. But when your joy is drained, mundane Christian disciplines like prayer, going to church, and reading the Bible feel much harder. Doubt, fear, and confusion take over. The problem is not that God has left you, but that your joy has drained.
The joy of our salvation doesn’t disappear overnight. We lose it slowly.
When we neglect time with God
When we allow sin to stay unconfessed
When we focus more on problems than on God
When we treat our relationship with God as routine
Joy fades when we stop guarding it. The good news is this: David didn’t say, “Give me a new salvation.” He said, “Restore my joy.” That means the joy can come back.
1. Return to God honestly
Don’t pretend. Come just as you are. Tell Him what you feel, even if it is just this, that you have lost your joy.
2. Spend unhurried time with Him
Don’t rush prayers. Sit with His Word. Let it speak to your heart again.
3. Deal with sin quickly
Don’t justify it. Confess it. Turn from it.
4. Remember what Jesus has done for you
You are forgiven. You are accepted. You are His.
Joy grows again when we remember the gospel and begin to see the goodness of God once more. With joy comes faith, and every “mundane” Christian discipline will be an exciting moment. Take ten minutes today—sit quietly and thank God specifically for your salvation, aloud if possible. Remind your heart what He has done for you.
By Santosh Chandran, Bible League International staff, New Zealand