Happiness isn’t a matter of luck. It’s a matter of learning! To live a happier life, I need to learn how to work well with others.
This is the skill of collaboration. It’s an important skill not often taught in schools; but when learned, it can exponentially increase a person’s happiness.
What do I need to learn in order to work well with other people?
First, learn to cooperate with others. In the Bible, the church in Philippi sent a man named Epaphroditus to help Paul while he was in prison in Rome. Philippians 2:25 says, “I feel that I must send Epaphroditus—my brother, coworker, and fellow soldier—back to you. You sent him as your personal representative to help me in my need” (GW).
By calling Epaphroditus his brother, coworker, and fellow soldier, Paul was using three relational metaphors that represent teamwork. Life together is a family, a fellowship, and a fight. Epaphroditus didn’t shut himself off from the world and become a lone ranger. He chose to be a team member in these three ways.
As a believer, I'm in the same fight together against Satan, so I need to cooperate with one other—no matter how different we are. The best place to learn how to do that is in the church.
Second, learn to be considerate. Paul mentioned Epaphroditus again in Philippians 2:26: “He has been longing to see all of you and is troubled because you heard that he was sick” (GW).
Notice how Paul used two examples of consideration: Paul was considerate of his coworker’s homesickness, and Epaphroditus was considerate about the Philippians’ concern.
When I learn to be considerate of other people’s needs, fears, and doubts, I’ll be a happier person. For instance, if I'm considerate of my spouse, I'll a have a happy marriage. But if I'm not thoughtful with my words and actions, I’ll have an unhappy marriage.
The Bible says in The Message paraphrase, “You must get along with each other. You must learn to be considerate of one another, cultivating a life in common” (1 Corinthians 1:10).
Cultivating a life with a common goal of Christlikeness takes work. Like a garden that requires cultivation to bear fruit, I'll see how my effort bears the fruit of happiness and strong relationships.
In Summary:
This text emphasizes that true happiness is not accidental but learned, specifically through the essential skill of collaboration. Drawing from Paul’s relationship with Epaphroditus in Philippians 2 and Paul's exhortation to the Corinthians, the passage highlights two critical components of working well with others: cooperation and consideration. By viewing community as a family, fellowship, and shared spiritual fight, individuals are encouraged to move away from isolation and actively cultivate deep, empathetic relationships. Ultimately, investing effort into understanding others' needs and aligning around shared goals bears the direct fruit of sustainable relational health and personal joy.
Bottom Line:
Relational happiness is a learned skill developed by intentionally choosing cooperation over isolation and consideration over self-interest.
Next Step:
Identify one current professional or personal partnership where I have recently felt friction or a tendency to "lone-ranger" the outcome. Shift my identity from an isolated operator to a collaborative builder by scheduling a brief alignment conversation with that person this week; focus entirely on practicing active consideration by asking about their current challenges, needs, or doubts before pushing my own agenda forward.
