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« on: October 07, 2019, 02:00:17 PM » |
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_______________________________________________ More Minutes With The Bible From The Berean Bible Society
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The Knowledge of His Will by Pastor Cornelius R. Stam
“For this cause we also, since the day we heard it, do not cease to pray for you, and to desire that ye might be filled with the knowledge of His will in all wisdom and spiritual understanding” (Col. 1:9).
GOD’S WILL FOR TODAY
Now beloved, we must have this clearly in mind as we study this passage in the first chapter of the Colossian letter. Every true spiritual believer will heartily desire to know, and do, the will of God. It is my earnest prayer that you may indeed “be filled with the knowledge of His will in all wisdom and spiritual understanding.”
Sad to say, however, the vast majority of believers reading this passage in Colossians One think only in terms of God’s will for their lives in their particular circumstances.
For example, a young Christian asks: “What is God’s will for my life? Should I go into the ministry or become a missionary? And if a missionary, should I go to China, Africa or India? Or would God have me stay in business and help to finance His work?” But while the young man is so concerned about God’s will for the details of his life, he is woefully ignorant of GOD’S WILL, i.e., what it is God wants done. The emphasis is put upon himself, rather than upon God and His great plan for the present dispensation.
So, I beg of you my dear friend, don’t misunderstand this passage, when Paul prays for the Colossians, and he certainly would pray for us, “that [we] might be filled with the knowledge of [God’s] will in all wisdom and spiritual understanding.”
Colossians 1:9 does not refer to God’s will then in a given situation, but to His long hidden purpose and program as revealed in the Pauline Epistles. He rightly holds us responsible to learn what this is:
“Having made known unto us THE MYSTERY OF HIS WILL, according to His good pleasure which He hath purposed in Himself” (Eph. 1:9).
“See then that ye walk circumspectly, not as fools, but as wise,
“Redeeming [buying up] the time, because the days are evil.
“WHEREFORE BE YE NOT UNWISE, BUT UNDERSTANDING WHAT THE WILL OF THE LORD IS” (Eph. 5:15-17).
Sadly, the majority of God’s people seem to think that His will should accommodate itself to their fluctuating experiences. When they are in the depths of despair and do not know where to turn, they cry to the Lord to show them His will. When on the mountaintop, maybe called upon to choose between two attractive alternatives, they ask the Lord again to show them His will. And if you draw a line to illustrate it, part of it would be way down and then the graph would go way up, of course. But all the while they neglect to inquire about His objective, or to learn how they may fit into His plan and purpose. This purpose is clearly defined for us in the Epistles of Paul. It runs straight as an arrow and we should conform ourselves to it.
Now God is interested--I don’t want you to misunderstand me--He is very interested in whatever concerns us. And He would have us look to Him for guidance in every detail of our lives. But let us put the emphasis where it belongs. If a man is ignorant of the will and purpose of God, what good is it to inquire whether he should enter the ministry or go to Africa or China? He will do as much harm as good wherever he goes. On the other hand, one who does have an intelligent understanding of the will of God and has been gripped by it will have little danger of remaining unused in the Lord’s service.
If we would be in the center of God’s will, then, we must come to a knowledge and an appreciation of the great secret revealed through Paul for us today. This alone can give us a true sense of our place in God’s program, broadening and balancing our spiritual experience.
Let us then labor fervently in prayer, as Epaphras did for the saints at Colosse, that we might “stand perfect and complete in all the will of God” (Col. 4:12).
Now in seeking to determine God’s will in the particular circumstances of life, the truly spiritual believer will take little heed to the very things that others think are so decisive. He will never depend on “getting the mind of God through prayer”; hoping for “inner promptings”--as one writer put it, “Not a voice, but an impression.” Nor will he go to the “promise box” and flip his Bible open at random to learn God’s will. If for no other reason, simply because he limits God to the particular promises in the box.
No, no, such an one will look for guidance in answer to prayer, to be sure, but he’ll do this by prayerfully using his God-given faculties in the light of the written Word, “rightly divided.”
Beloved, God has given us hands to work with, hearts to love with, and minds to think with, and He expects us to use them all to His glory. Hence, in any given situation we should use the common sense that He’s given us in the light of His Word.
Naturally, this affects our wills, too, and our prayer lives, but here again a knowledge of the Mystery broadens us and establishes us, as we lose our wills in His.
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