SBE #7: The Will of Our Lord
We are here to do the Will of the Lord. Like Jesus, we must forsake our own wills for that of His. We can say, "if it is possible let this cup pass," but we must be also willing to say, "not my will, yours." The Will of Our Lord is rarely easy, but the reward is always sweet. The problem we face as man is that we are so temporal, so here-and-now. If we are to be rewared to do the Will, we want our come-up-ins NOW. Having no experience with eternity, we find it hard to wait for it to come.
Two flaws in thought:
First: Doing the Will should always be reward enough. Knowing that we are doing exactly what Our Father wants should be bliss. Can we know what exactly is the Will, well, I think so. We can especially know what it is not. Call on Abba for His Will, and He will reveal it to you. Spend time in His Word, in His Presence, kneeling before His Throne. He wants us to do His Will, should He not let us know what it is?
Second: Why should we expect a reward in the first place? If the Sovereign of the universe tell us to do this or that, then we should, no questions asked, no reward expected. No one ever got a "you paid your taxes" bonus. I never heard of anyone getting a prize for not speeding. So why the expectation?
Thank you for reading!
Scott.
Two flaws in thought:
First: Doing the Will should always be reward enough. Knowing that we are doing exactly what Our Father wants should be bliss. Can we know what exactly is the Will, well, I think so. We can especially know what it is not. Call on Abba for His Will, and He will reveal it to you. Spend time in His Word, in His Presence, kneeling before His Throne. He wants us to do His Will, should He not let us know what it is?
Second: Why should we expect a reward in the first place? If the Sovereign of the universe tell us to do this or that, then we should, no questions asked, no reward expected. No one ever got a "you paid your taxes" bonus. I never heard of anyone getting a prize for not speeding. So why the expectation?
Thank you for reading!
Scott.
3 Comments:
Scott...
This was the exactly what I talked and thought about all weekend at a women's retreat.
The woman teaching in passing mentioned Job and it stuck with me. She said, he did not curse God, he did not sin, he did ask a lot of "why me?" And at the end, he did get some lecturing from God, what could Job have done that would have pleased God?
If our end goal is knowing God, then He is enough. We may mourn the losses or hope for His hand to save a situation, but whether or not He does it the way we see fit, we say yes and amen and love Him the same. We take His will patiently and trust Him totally.
Much easier said than done, but ultimately true, and I think the American church (and me!) have a very hard time grasping that. The underground church has always understood.
:) Blessings to you!
Rivetting buddy...
Scott,
I found your blog! Some interesting thoughts here.
Your second point, I used to agree with wholeheartedly. Now, I think I might've been just a bit off.
There's a short book that is free to read online called "The Dangerous Duty of Delight". It can be found here http://www.desiringgod.org/ResourceLibrary/OnlineBooks/ByTitle/ in PDF format. Short read. Touches on what you're talking about in the end here.
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