Archive for the Will – God’s Category

Good vs. the Best – The Test of Self-Interest by Oswald Chambers

Posted in God's Plan, Will - God's, Will - Our on May 25, 2011 by Harry

8 Then Abram said to Lot, “Let there be no strife between you and me, and between your herdsmen and my herdsmen, for we are kinsmen. 9 Is not the whole land before you? Separate yourself from me. If you take the left hand, then I will go to the right, or if you take the right hand, then I will go to the left.” 

As soon as you begin to live the life of faith in God, fascinating and luxurious prospects will open up before you, and these things are yours by right; but if you are living the life of faith you will exercise your right to waive your rights, and let God choose for you. God sometimes allows you to get into a place of testing where your own welfare would be the right and proper thing to consider if you were not living a life of faith; but if you are, you will joyfully waive your right and leave God to choose for you. This is the discipline by means of which the natural is transformed into the spiritual by obedience to the voice of God.

Whenever right is made the guidance in the life, it will blunt the spiritual insight. The great enemy of the life of faith in God is not sin, but the good which is not good enough. The good is always the enemy of the best. It would seem the wisest thing in the world for Abraham to choose, it was his right, and the people around would consider him a fool for not choosing. Many of us do not go on spiritually because we prefer to choose what is right instead of relying on God to choose for us. We have to learn to walk according to the standard which has its eye on God. “Walk before Me.”

  • Chambers, O. (1993). My utmost for his highest : Selections for the year (NIV edition.). Westwood, NJ: Barbour and Co.

J.C. Ryle on True Christianity

Posted in * Favorites, Lifestyle, Will - God's, Worldly Pursuits on July 29, 2009 by Harry

J.C. Ryle“True Christianity! Let us mind that word true. There is a vast quantity of religion current in the world which is not true, genuine Christianity. It passes muster, it satisfies sleepy consciences; but it is not good money. It is not the authentic reality that called itself Christianity in the beginning.

There are thousands of men and women who go to churches and chapels every Sunday and call themselves Christians. They make a profession of faith in Christ. Their names are in the baptismal register. They are reckoned Christians while they live. They are married with a Christian marriage service. They mean to be buried as Christians when they die. But you never see any fight about their religion! Of spiritual strife and exertion and conflict and self–denial and watching and warring they know literally nothing at all.

Such Christianity may satisfy man, and those who say anything against it may be thought very hard and uncharitable; but it certainly is not the Christianity of the Bible. It is not the religion which the Lord Jesus founded and His apostles preached. It is not the religion which produces real holiness. True Christianity is a fight.”

  • J.C. Ryle, from the book Holiness

1 Timothy 2:4

Posted in 1 Timothy, Atonement, Reformed, Salvation, Will - God's with tags on July 8, 2009 by Harry

New testament scroll

3 This is good, and it is pleasing in the sight of God our Savior, 4 who desires all people to be saved and to come to the knowledge of the truth.

Reformation Study Bible notes:

  • This does not mean that God sovereignly wills every human being to be saved
  • It may refer to God’s general  benevolence in that he takes no delight in the death of the wicked, or it may mean that God wills all types of people to be saved (i.e., God does not exclude certain types of people from election to salvation
  • see God’s will

Read more »

2 Peter 3:9

Posted in 2 Peter, Salvation, Will - God's on June 16, 2009 by Harry

bible9 The Lord is not slow to fulfill his promise as some count slowness, but is patient toward you, not wishing that any should perish, but that all should reach repentance.

  • Ask RC – The Sovereignty of God; 2007 Regional Conference Charlotte, NC
  • Not wishing reflects God’s decretive or sovereign will
  • The key to the text is the word “any”
    • Who are any? – look at the antecedent and it is clear that “any” is the elect
  • God’s will

God Relenting – Jonah 3:10

Posted in Johah, Will - God's on June 2, 2009 by Harry

Hebrew Scripture

10 When God saw what they did, how they turned from their evil way, God relented of the disaster that he had said he would do to them, and he did not do it.

R.C. Sproul:

  • Discussed as #3 in “How to Study the Bible” – do not interpret the didactic by the narrative
  • the bible will tell you a story and later on like in the epistles you read the meaning of the narrative
  • if you are there watching the crucifixion, it is not immediately clear to you that what is happening here is a cosmic act of atonement – you need the didactic portion of scripture to explain those events to you
  • what happens if you interpret the didactic by the narrative?
    • his complaint with Pentecostal theology is that it interprets Pentecost in a way that is completely opposed to the NT interpretation of Pentecost
    • it’s view of Pentecost is too low, because they submerge the didactic portion of scripture to inference drawn from the narrative
    • even worse the scourge in Evangelism today is open theism – it is now trying to persuade you that the Lord God omniscient, is not the Lord God omniscient, that He does not know all things, he doesn’t know what you are going to do before you do it, because there is no way He can know the future of free events done by moral agents and the bible proves it because in the narratives we see Abraham offering Isaac and the angel coming and saying “now I know that you are going to obey Me
      • and they heap up these verses of God’s relenting and God’s repenting and they say see the Bible teaches that God changes His mind, He is not immutable, that God learns things, he is not omniscient, and this justifies our gastly theology – never mind the portions of scripture that God is not a man that He should not repent and teaches you didactly and that God does know what you are going to say before you say it even though in the narrative it may be told from a human perspective as if God were learning – you are kept from coming to that conclusion by the didactic portion – interpret scripture by scripture

ESV Study Bible Notes:

  • evil . . . disaster.
    • Both terms translate Hebrew ra‘ah (see note on 1:2).
    • The use of the same word underscores the close connection between human action and divine response.
    • God did not carry out the threatened disaster because the Ninevites repented of their evil (see note on 3:4).
    • From a temporal perspective, God responds to human action; from an eternal perspective, God chooses the means (human repenting) as well as the end (divine relenting).
    • The repentance of Gentiles contrasts with the repeated lack of repentance on the part of Israel
    • reference post

Isaiah 55:8-9

Posted in * Favorites, Isaiah, Will - God's with tags on May 16, 2009 by Harry

isaiah

8 For my thoughts are not your thoughts,neither are your ways my ways, declares the Lord. 9 For as the heavens are higher than the earth, so are my ways higher than your ways and my thoughts than your thoughts.

ESV Study Bible notes:

  • “thoughts are not your thoughts”
    • that is, they are as high above man’s thoughts as the heaves are above the earth
  • “neither are your ways my ways”
    • In the immediate context, this is an appeal to people to exchange their sinful “thoughts” and “ways”  for God’s, which ar e higher (nobler and more magnificent).
    • More broadly, theologians have recognized that God, the incomparable Creator, is far above his finite creatures and beyond their ability to describe him or comprehend him fully; though they may know him truly, such knowledge is always partial and imperfect.

      • But because God is perfectly wise in all his thoughts and ways, his people can take great comfort amid hardship and when inevitably they are unable to understand the mysteries and tragedies of life. and vastly superior to the expectations of human intuitions

C.S. Lewis from Mere Christianity

Posted in Pride, Will - God's, Will - Our on May 10, 2009 by Harry

C.S. Lewis

“The more we get what we now call “ourselves” out of the way and let Him take us over, the more truly ourselves we become.”

God’s Desire; Anthropomorphic language

Posted in Will - God's on March 29, 2009 by Harry

R.C. Sproul Sermon: “2005 National Conference: Five Keys to Spiritual Growth – How To Study the Bible”

From a website http://www.enduringword.com/commentaries/0232.htm:

So the LORD relented from the harm which He said He would do to His people.

a. So the LORD relented: God answered Moses’ prayer. God was going to destroy the nation – all Moses had to do was leave God alone and let Him do it. But Moses did not leave God alone; he labored in intercession according to what He knew of the heart of God.
b. So the LORD relented: In the King James Version this phrase is translated the Lord repented of the evil which he thought to do unto his people. Based on this, some believe God sometimes needs to repent of evil, or that God changes His mind.

Read more »

God’s Will

Posted in Will - God's on March 29, 2009 by Harry

From Reformed study bible article in Ez 18:

The Will of God: How Can I Know God’s Will?

  • The Scriptures speak of the will of God in a variety of ways.
    • Even human wills are complex, so we should not be surprised to find that the divine will is multi-faceted
    • Reformed theology has traditionally stressed two senses in which we should understand God’s will.
    • Some Reformed theologians also speak of a third sense.

Read more »

God’s Providence

Posted in Evil, God's Plan, Providence - God's, Will - God's, Will - Our on January 8, 2008 by Harry
  • God’s Providence References:

Orthodox Faith:

  • The Doctrine of Evil
  • To understand the Orthodox view and practice of exorcism, one must know the Orthodox presuppositions of evil and its doctrine of Satan.
  • The patristic evidence points to the fact that the cause of evil in the world is the devil.
  • The devil was created by God as an angel, who was free, and as a free agent chose to oppose the plan of God.
  • That is, the devil is a fallen angel.
  • Satan is not evil by nature, but by will and action.
  • In Satan there is no truth whatsoever; he is absolute falsehood and deception.
  • Satan is not just a negation or deprivation of good, but a positive force with free will that always chooses evil.
  • The devil has the ability to recognize divine power, as in the incident of recognizing Christ as the Son of God (Matt. 4:1-11; Luke 4:1-3).
  • Satan has under his leadership legions and invisible powers, with their own “satanic teachings.”
  • The devil and evil spirits know that God exists and recognize true and devoted Christians, but pious Christians discern the plans of the devil.
  • The devil, however, constantly employs every method of deception to enslave man to satanic forces and causes rebellion against God.
  • He is the cause of corruption and disorder, a parasitic power in the world that will ultimately be destroyed by the power of God in the “last days.”
  • Because there is no compromise between God and the devil, the struggle will continue until the end.
  • The Orthodox doctrine of God is that He is eternal, uncreated and incorporeal (Lacking material form or substance).
  • All other creatures, both visible and invisible, were created by God as free.
  • The power of the devil will ultimately be destroyed by the resurrection of the dead and the renewal of creation.
  • Salvation from all evil will be attained by obedience to God and His plan.
  • This world is a battleground between the acceptance of good and evil.
  • It must be pointed out that the world as the creation of God is not evil.
    • What is evil is the satanic power, destroyed by the power of the cross and the resurrection of Christ.
  • Another orthodox reference

Calvin Theology

  • The Westminster Confession of Faith :
  • Westminster Confession of Faith is a reformed confession of faith, in the Calvinist theological tradition
  • CHAPTER V: Of Providence
    • 1. God the great Creator of all things doth uphold,[a] direct, dispose, and govern all creatures, actions, and things,[b] from the greatest even to the least,[c] by His most wise and holy providence,[d] according to His infallible foreknowledge,[e] and the free and immutable counsel of his own will,[f] to the praise of the glory of his wisdom, power, justice, goodness, and mercy.[g]
    • [a]. Neh. 9:6; Ps. 145:14-16; Heb. 1:3
    • [b]. Dan. 4:34-35; Ps. 135:6; Acts 17:25-28; Job 38:1-41:34
    • [c]. Matt. 10:29-31, see Matt. 6:26-32
    • [d]. Prov. 15:3; II Chron. 16:9; Ps. 104:24; Ps. 145:17
    • [e]. Acts 15:18; Isa. 42:9; Ezek. 11:5
    • [f]. Eph. 1:11; Ps. 33:10-11
    • [g]. Isa. 63:14; Eph. 3:10; Rom. 9:17; Gen. 45:7; Ps. 145:7
    • An exposition (setting forth of meaning or intent) to the Westminster Confession of Faith is found here
  • John Drury
    • a PhD student in Systematic Theology at Princeton Theological Seminary.
    • Writing of Calvin’s thoughts on God’s Providence
    • Calvin reiterates his previous position here with regard to the problem of providence and evil.
    • He unabashedly attributes to God’s secret providence all acts of evil.
    • This is just a logical extension of the argument thus far.
    • What is added is Calvin’s rejection of the distinction between active and permissive will.
    • This distinction is usually employed to acquit God of complicity in evil.
    • Calvin does not see the need to acquit God of anything, since that would both put us in the position of judging God and would ignore the fact that God always brings good out of evil.
    • Calvin rejects the scholastic distinction “between doing and permitting” (229).
    • God does not merely permit, but wills all acts, including evil ones.
    • He states clearly “that men can accomplish nothing except by God’s secret command, that they cannot by deliberating accomplish anything except what he has already decreed within himself and determines by his secret direction” (229).
    • He substantiates this claim by offering a number of Old Testament references as well as the New Testament accounts of the foreordination of the death of Christ (230).
    • Calvin notes that even Satan works within the boundaries of God’s providence: “I confess, indeed, that it is often by means of Satan’s intervention that God acts in the wicked, but in such a way that Satan performs his part by God’s impulsion and advances as far as he is allowed” (232).
    • The crux of the matter is that God does not have two wills (233).
    • God has one will, one plan, one law, one decree.
    • There is no confusion in God as to what he desires and enacts in his creation.
    • Calvin cites Augustine at length to argue that God’s executes his singular will though it mysteriously includes the disobedience of his will (235).
    • The key for Augustine, as well as Calvin, is that this is a mystery.
    • Calvin concludes his entire discourse on providence with an admonition to be attentive to Scripture: “For our wisdom ought to be nothing else than to embrace with humble teachableness, and at least without finding fault, whatever is taught in Scared Scripture. Those who too insolently scoff, even though it is clear enough that they are prating against God, are not worthy of a longer refutation” (237).
    • This is a crucial reminder that Calvin intends his account to be received as a comment on Scripture and not an independent theory of providence.
    • It also allows his readers to place his understanding of providence under the careful scrutiny of Scripture.

Catholic encyclopedia

  • Also check the Vatican website: 309, where the catechisms of the Catholic faith are laid out in detail
  • The Catechism of the Catholic Church, or CCC, is an official exposition of the teachings of the Catholic Church
  • Providence in general, or foresight, is a function of the virtue of prudence, and may be defined as the practical reason, adapting means to an end.
  • As applied to God, Providence is God Himself considered in that act by which in His wisdom He so orders all events within the universe that the end for which it was created may be realized.
  • That end is that all creatures should manifest the glory of God, and in particular that man should glorify Him, recognizing in nature the work of His hand, serving Him in obedience and love, and thereby attaining to the full development of his nature and to eternal happiness in God.
  • The universe is a system of real beings created by God and directed by Him to this supreme end, the concurrence of God being necessary for all natural operations, whether of things animate or inanimate, and still more so for operations of the supernatural order.
  • God preserves the universe in being; He acts in and with every creature in each and all its activities.
  • In spite of sin, which is due to the willful perversion of human liberty, acting with the concurrence, but contrary to the purpose and intention of God and in spite of evil which is the consequence of sin, He directs all, even evil and sin itself, to the final end for which the universe was created.
  • All these operations on God’s part, with the exception of creation, are attributed in Catholic theology to Divine Providence.
  • The question of Providence in the Fathers is almost invariably connected with the problem of evil.
  • How can evil and suffering be compatible with the beneficent providence of an all-powerful God? And why especially should the just be allowed to suffer while the wicked are apparently prosperous and happy?
    • Patristic solutions to these problems may be summed up under the following heads:
    • * Sin is not ordained by the will of God, though it happens with His permission. It can be ascribed to Providence only as a secondary result (Origen, “Contra Celsum”, IV, lxviii in “P.G.”, XI, 1516-7; St. John Damascene, “De fid. orth.”, ii, 21 in “P.G.”, XCIV, 95 sq.).
    • Sin is due to the abuse of free will; an abuse which was certainly foreseen by God, but could have been prevented only by depriving man of his most noble attribute (Tertullian, “Adv. Marcion.”, II, v-vii in “P.L.”, II, 317-20; St. Cyril of Alexandria “In Julian.”, IX, xiii, 10, 11, 18 in “P.G.”, LXXIV, 120-1, 127-32; Theodoret, “De prov. orat.”, IX, vi in “P.G.”, LXXXIII, 662).
    • Moreover, in this world man has to learn by experience and contrast, and to develop by the overcoming of obstacles (Lactantius, “De ira Dei”, xiii, xv in “P.L.”, VII, 115-24; St. Augustine, “De ordine”, I, vii, n. 18 in “P.L.”, XXXII, 986).
    • One reason therefore why God permits sin is that man may arrive at once at a consciousness of righteousness and of his own inability to attain it, and so may put his trust in God (Anon. epis. ad Diog., vii-ix in “P.G.”, II, 1175 sq.; St. Gregory the Great, “Lib. moral.”, III, lvii in “P.L.”, LXXV, 627).
    • For sin itself God is not responsible, but only for the evils that result as a punishment of sin (Tertullian, “Adv. Marc.”, II, xiv, xv in “P.L.”, II, 327 sq.), evils which happen without God’s will but are not contrary to it (St. Gregory the Great, op. cit., VI, xxxii in “P.L.”, LXXVII, 746, 747).
    • Had there been no sin, physical evil would have been inconsistent with the Divine goodness (St. Augustine, “De div. quæst.”, lxxxii in “P.L.”, LX, 98, 99); nor would God permit evil at all, unless He could draw good out of evil (St. Augustine, “Enchir.”, xi in “P.L.”, LX, 236; “Serm.”, ccxiv, 3 in “P.L.”, XXXVIII, 1067; St. Gregory the Great, op. cit., VI, xxxii, XVIII, xlvi in “P.L.”, LXXV, 747; LXXVI, 61-2).
    • All physical evil, therefore, is the consequence of sin, the inevitable result of the Fall (St. John Chrysostom, “Ad Stagir.”, I, ii in “P.G.”, LXVII, 428, 429; St. Gregory the Great, op. cit., VIII, li, lii in “P.L.”, LXXV, 833, 834), and regarded in this light is seen to be at once a medicine (St. Augustine, “De div. quæst.”, lxxxii in “P.L.”, XL, 98, 99; “Serm.”, xvii, 4, 5 in “P.L.”, XXXVIII, 126-8), a discipline (“Serm.”, xv, 4-9 in “P.L.”, XXXVIII, 118-21; St. Gregory the Great, op. cit., V, xxxv; VII, xxix; XIV, xl in “P.L.”, LXXV, 698, 818, 1060), and an occasion of charity (St. Gregory the Great, VII, xxix).
    • Evil and suffering thus tend to the increase of merit (XIV, xxxvi, xxxvii in “P.L.”, 1058, 1059), and in this way the function of justice becomes an agency for goodness (Tertullian, c. “Adv. Marc.”, II, xi, xiii in “P.L.”, 324 sq.).
    • Evil, therefore, ministers to God’s design (St. Gregory the Great, op. cit., VI, xxxii in “P.L.”, LXXV, 747; Theodoret, “De prov. orat.”, v-viii in “P.L.”, LXXXIII, 652 sq.).
    • Hence, if the universe be considered as a whole it will be found that that which for the individual is evil will in the end turn out to be consistent with Divine goodness, in conformity with justice and right order (Origen, “Contra Celsum”, IV, xcix in “P.G.”, XI, 1177-80; St. Augustine, “De ordine”, I, i-v, 9; II, iv in “P.L.”, XXXII, 977-87, 990, 999-1002).
    • It is the end that proves happiness (Lactantius, “De ira Dei”, xx in “P.L.”, VII, 137 sq.; St. Ambrose, “De offic. minist.”, XVI, cf. XII, XV in “P.L.”, XVI, 44-6, 38 sq.; St. John Chrysostom, “Hom. xiii in Matt.”, n. 5 in “P.G.”, LXVII, 216, 217; St. Augustine “In Ps.”, xci, n. 8 in “P.L.”, XXXIII, 1176; Theodoret, “De prov. orat.”, ix in “P.G.”, LXXXIII, 727 sq.).
    • In the Last Judgment the problem of evil will be solved, but till then the workings of Providence will remain more or less a mystery (St. Augustine, “De div. quæst.”, lxxxii in “P.L.”, XL, 98, 99; St. John Chrysostom, “Ad eos qui scand.”, VIII, IX in “P.G.”, LII, 494, 495).
    • In regard to poverty and suffering, however, it is well to bear in mind that in depriving us of earthly goods, God is but recalling what is His own (St. Gregory the Great, op. cit., II, xxxi in “P.L.”, LXXVII, 571); and secondly that, as Salvianus tells us (“De gub. Dei”, I, i, 2 in “P.L.”, LIII, 29 sq.), nothing is so light that it does not appear heavy to him who bears it unwillingly, and nothing so heavy that it does not appear light to him who bears it with goodwill.

from Michael Youssef sermon 11/27/07 -”The Sovereignty of God. Part 2″ :

  • God gave us free will but our will cannot affect God’s plan
  • Our will will affect our own eternal destiny
  • It is God’s will to have a heaven and a hell and for us to choose (11:42)

TFL: "Every Picture Tells A Story, Part B" *

Posted in Giving, Will - God's, Will - Our with tags on January 5, 2008 by Harry
  • Genesis 50 – Joseph and his bones
  • We cannot be friends of the world and a friend of God at the same time
    • Your life would be a living contradiction
    • Nothing but emptiness

TFL: “Deo Volente” *****

Posted in * Favorites, Will - God's with tags , on December 26, 2007 by Harry
  • Deo Volente = God willing
  • Sin of presumption
  • Planning is okay but planning which leaves God out is wrong
    • We are not the masters of our own destiny
  • In all our plans we are dependent on God and subject to His will
  • God first, God willing
  • God first with my money, talents, brain, my everything
  • And here is what I hope to become here is what I hope to do – God willing
  • The transience of life is not a reason to snatch up all we can

LTW: "Everlasting Father, Part 2" not archived

Posted in Salvation, Will - God's, Will - Our on December 20, 2007 by Harry
  • People say that Christians are narrow minded in that Christ is the only way to be saved
    • These people want to come to God on their terms, not God’s

TFL: "My Times Are N Your Hands Part 2, B" ***

Posted in Humility, Will - God's on December 20, 2007 by Harry
  • There is a need to accept responsibility
  • Psalm: A man’s heart devises his way, but the Lord directs His steps
  • We must do all in submission to God’s will
  • There is a humility to be prospered

TFL: “Do You Think I Came To Bring Peace?” ***

Posted in Peace, Salvation, Will - God's, Will - Our with tags , on December 3, 2007 by Harry
  • Luke 12:49:
    • 49″I have come to bring fire on the earth, and how I wish it were already kindled! 50But I have a baptism to undergo, and how distressed I am until it is completed! 51Do you think I came to bring peace on earth? No, I tell you, but division. 52From now on there will be five in one family divided against each other, three against two and two against three. 53They will be divided, father against son and son against father, mother against daughter and daughter against mother, mother-in-law against daughter-in-law and daughter-in-law against mother-in-law.”
  • What Jesus says here runs contrary to everything else He said or did
  • Even complicating things more for us, Paul explains Jesus in terms of peace
  • Immediately before He asks this question, Jesus’ preface has to do with fire and baptism.
    • Jesus refers to the fact that fire does two things
    • Burns – Consumes what is combustible (food, paper)
    • Purifies what is not combustible (metal)
  • Baptism refers to His resolution to do the will of the Father
    • His passion and crucifixion are ultimate display of Him doing the will of the Father
  • Analogy: “The lifeboat is no good if the drowning man does not get into it. And no one else can do it for him. He must do it himself.”
  • Going back to the question Jesus asks
    • Jesus did not mean that His ultimate objective was division, but that the effect of His accomplishment would be division.
    • When a life is saved, it changes the dynamic of interpersonal relationships
    • Opening of Pilgrim’s progress is an example

LTW: "The Holiness of God" *** not archived

Posted in Will - God's on November 29, 2007 by Harry
  • People want to know God’s will for their life
  • The #1 secret for knowing the will of God in your life is my inward willingness to obey the word of God when He shows it to me.
    • This willingness cannot be learned from reading or listening to sermons or running from counselor to counselor or from going from friend to friend
    • The only way to learn this willingness is spending time with God and His word

TFL: "Good News, Bad News, Part A" **

Posted in Providence - God's, Trials and Suffering, Trust, Weaknesses, Will - God's, Will - Our with tags on November 29, 2007 by Harry

When you suffer unjustly:

  • Do not be suprised.
    • Do not be mistaken that all will be well if we give our lives to Jesus
    • Romans 8:28 (New International Version):
    • “28And we know that in all things God works for the good of those who love him,[a] who[b] have been called according to his purpose.”

TFL: "When Trials Come, Part 1, B" *****

Posted in * Favorites, Providence - God's, Trials and Suffering, Trust, Weaknesses, Will - God's, Will - Our with tags on November 28, 2007 by Harry
  • Knowledge over feelings
  • What is this knowledge?
    • God’s Providence
    • We know in all things God works for the good of those who love Him, who have been called according to His purpose
    • Romans 8:28 (New International Version):
      “28And we know that in all things God works for the good of those who love him,[a] who[b] have been called according to his purpose.”
  • We cannot accept trials for their own sake as a source of joy
  • Trials are painful, but may become the occasions of joy if we respond from the right perspective
  • Unless we think correctly we cannot respond properly
  • Paul in Romans – transform your minds
    • Romans 12:2 (New International Version)
    • “2Do not conform any longer to the pattern of this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind. Then you will be able to test and approve what God’s will is—his good, pleasing and perfect will.”
  • Society teaches us to think that when we do not have trials then we have joy and so if we spend all our time removing trials, then we will have joy
    • James says the opposite
  • Now this is difficult, but God would not ask it if it were not attainable
    • Gold will provide for us and is willing to do so
  • Trials are inevitable, they are not unusual
  • Jesus said “in the world we will have tribulations, but be of good cheer, for I have overcome the world.
    • John 16:33
    • 33 These things I have spoken to you, that in Me you may have peace. In the world you will[d] have tribulation; but be of good cheer, I have overcome the world.”

Why are there trials, a few reasons are offered:

  • Faith rationalization
    • We are unfit for heaven and by Jesus’s death on the cross he has made heaven available to us
    • So that we may trust unreservedly in Him
  • Trials are the means by which our faith is tested
    • Is our faith genuine?
    • It is easy to be faithful when everything is going “rosey-posey”
    • It is when the wheels come off then we discover if our faith is genuine
    • Is our faith growing?
  • Perseverance
    • By the means of the testing we develop staying power
    • God knows how much we can take
    • We are forced to learn in practice what we know in principle
    • Look into the eyes of a person with soft eyes, ie a caring grandmother or a sensitive youth and you can guarantee they did not come to that point without persevering trials
    • Perseverance when it finishes, renders as its product: maturity, completion, and lacking nothing
    • We do not get the crown without perseverance
    • We become mature, like Jesus through this process
  • Trials are part of God’s program to make us more like Christ.
  • Puritan writer:
    • “The winds of tribulation blow away the chaff of error, hypocrisy, and doubt, leaving the element of Christian character.”
  • More progress is made through disappointment and tears than laughter
  • Spurgeon:
    • “Look at the weather beaten sailor and he would not have gotten toughness if he stayed on the shore.”
    • “You may go to school, but you cannot learn endurance there.”
  • If we believe all this then it will dramatically affect how we respond to trials
    • Trials hurt and may panic us, but we consider them pure joy because endurance and sacred toughness come down that road and not down the road of easiness.
  • If we lack wisdom, ie if none of this makes sense, then ask God and He will get us sorted out -> PRAY
    • It is a supernatural response that James prescribes and without God’s intervention, ie the Spirit’s power, we will never even come close to realizing it.

LTW" "The Sovereignty of God. Part 2" ** not archived

Posted in God's Plan, Providence - God's, Will - God's, Will - Our on November 28, 2007 by Harry
  • God gave us free will but our will cannot affect God’s plan
  • Our will will affect our eternity
    • It is God’s will to have a heaven and a hell and for us to choose (11:42)
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