HOW TO BE GUIDED BY GOD
by Rev. Roger Smalling, D.Min
Years ago, Dianne and I found ourselves on the southern
border of Texas, preparing to enter Mexico as missionaries. But we
hadn't the faintest idea where to minister in that vast country.
So we spent a day in a motel seeking God. It was a typical missionary
situation. We were on the way, but did not know exactly where to
go. The Lord spoke to both of us through some biblical principles.
While
we prayed, we felt peace that we should go to the next large city
in Mexico, beyond the border towns. This
was Ciudad Victoria, about 200 miles south of Texas. We had the name
of a missionary there, although we did not know him personally. So
off we went the next day.
Upon arrival in Ciudad Victoria, we looked up the
missionary. He explained how he desired to start another church in
a section of town that had none, but his up-coming move to Guadalajara
left him no time. He introduced us to the family that wanted a church
started on their property. We unpacked our suitcases and our ministry
in Mexico started right there! God's personal word to us was fulfilled
to the letter.
This sounds like we literally fell into God's will
through a simple chain of events. Yet I vividly recall the feeling
of uncertainty as we wrestled for guidance in that motel room.
Is it normal to find ourselves puzzling over God's
will from time to time? During a recent Bible study on divine guidance,
a new Christian complained that God's will is sometimes difficult
to find. "Why doesn't He speak audibly and
just say what He wants? he asked. But we needn't feel something is
wrong because God's will is temporarily obscure. Good reasons exist
for this phenomenon.
The Lord sometimes speaks in striking ways. At times
we have no doubt about guidance.
But finding God's will is frequently harder than
that, as though He were deliberately hiding it. The Christian may
be obliged to act like a detective hunting for clues. He digs into
the Word, seeks counsel, and prays for guidance. He wishes God would
speak louder. He might even develop feelings of inferiority, because
he cannot hear God clearly. Eventually the clues all point in one
direction so that he reaches an intelligent conclusion about what
God wants.
Few things irritate me more than a brash and boastful
person who portrays that his relationship with God and level of faith
is such that he always discerns God's will accurately and instantly.
I simply don't believe him. Both God's Word and the experience of
Christians throughout the ages indicate that such boastful declarations
have roots in spiritual pride rather than genuine experience.
Divine Guidance is based on Godly Wisdom. Ephesians 5:17 clearly links wisdom with
understanding the will of God.
...
do not be foolish, but understand what the LordÕs will is.
Since no one attains perfect wisdom in this life,
it follows that everyone has plenty to learn. God faithfully rescues
us when we make honest mistakes. But this reflects more on His ability
to guide than on our ability to follow.
The element of mystery in finding His will exists
to provoke growth in wisdom and knowledge. So when teaching on guidance,
I spend more time on the aspects of guidance combined. Let's take
a look at some of these characteristics from James 3:17:
But the wisdom that comes from heaven is first
of all pure; then peace-loving, considerate, submissive, full of
mercy and good fruit, impartial and sincere.
In presenting this verse I don't mean to stress the
attainment of wisdom, but rather understanding the characteristics
of it. These two are vastly different. If we imagine that we must
acquire great wisdom before being able to follow the Lord accurately,
then we risk getting into fear and bondage. Christians have a natural
sense of unworthiness anyway, due to an awakened conscience. Sometimes
Satan tries to pervert that virtue into an inferiority complex. No,
the only qualification for understanding the characteristics of Divine
Wisdom is the ability to read James 3:17. And here's the description
we find...
First
pure
When we have to make an important decision we can
always compare it with this passage. If all of the characteristics
match, the decision is probably right. If any are missing, especially
the first one, PURITY, then it is a satanic trap. If it passes this
first test, we can then ask God for confirmation via other signs.
Satan can counterfeit any aspect of Divine Wisdom
in James 3:27 except purity. Any element of shady dealing, duplicity,
or little white lies, is clear proof that the whole affair is diabolical
in origin.
During our ministry in Ecuador, a couple in the states
offered us a car. It seemed to be genuine answer to prayer. Though
certain import restrictions intervened, a little white lie to the
Ecuadorian government could resolve everything. After all, we reasoned,
the whim of the local official is the law in actual practice here,
so what difference does it make? We're doing Kingdom business. It's
really no concern of theirs. (We can always rationalize a decision
if we want something badly enough!)
I had no peace, so I sought God and He pointed out
James 3:17 and the word "pure". We rejected the couple's
kind offer. Later God provided honorably and honestly through another
couple.
Then
peace-loving
Which does it create: unity or dissension? I must
qualify this because righteousness will always cause dissension where
people are in sin. Purity is more important than peace, which is
another reason why it appears first. Jesus said, ...I came not
to send peace, but a sword. Mat.10:34 In that context, He was talking about
the conflict between good an evil that would center on Him. Paul
said in Rom.12:18,
If it is possible,
as far as it depends on you, live at peace with everyone.
Some Christians desire peace among the brethren to
such an extent that they're willing to sacrifice righteousness, shade
the truth, or let sin and false doctrine go on rather than reprove
it. Whenever we sacrifice purity for the sake of peace, we lose both.
Among truth-loving Christians there will be a general
feeling of peace if the decision is from the Lord. A group of godly
believers can often be to us what a safety rope is to a mountain
climber.
Prov.11:14 For lack of guidance a nation falls,
but many advisers make victory sure. Considerate
The word in the original Greek, used only this one
time in the New Testament, carries the idea of being reasonable.
The Amplified correctly renders it as, "willing to yield to
reason". Have you ever met the zealot who is so sure of everything
that you canÕt reason with him? Remaining open-minded can protect
us from mistakes. But when the mind closes to new evidence, it often
becomes closed to God.
Full
of mercy and good fruits
What is the end result of the decision to be made?
What is the ultimate fruit of it? Who will it help, and how? These
questions can shed a lot of light on important decisions.
Submissive
Two young boys, new Christians, began to receive
what they thought were leadings and messages from God. But along
with this came the instruction that they should keep it from their
pastor because he wouldn't understand. This went on for a while until
some of the messages started getting a little weird.
Eventually, one of the boys became suspicious. He
wondered if it made sense for the Spirit of God to reveal things
to them which He hidden from their spiritual leader. After going
to his pastor, he found out of course, that they had been hearing
from the wrong spirit.
James goes to a lot of trouble to clarify the difference
between worldly and Divine Wisdom. This can be summarized by two
words: Pride vs. humility. But the pride in question is the most
subtle and dangerous kind: spiritual pride. This vice is the most
deceptive of all because the victim may consider himself to be wise,
though he usually harbors envy and selfish ambitions.
The most humble man (for the least reason) that I
have ever personally met was the late Dr. Francis Shaeffer. I visited
his work in Switzerland several times while living as a missionary
in Geneva. He had four earned Doctorates. Yet the first thing I noticed
about him was his quiet and self-effacing manner. But when he spoke,
it was shat I call "quiet thunder". This may seem contradictory
but you would not think so if you had known him.
I was in Ecuador, while visiting the jungle, that
the characteristics of Divine Wisdom as the key to guidance were
revealed to me. The Lord used the native huts to show me the relationship
between these characteristics and the various other signs that He
uses to guide us. I noticed that the Indians spent as much time on
the foundation as the rest of the house altogether. Only after a
solid foundation was completed, (generally a wooden platform raised
well above the ground), would they put up the four corner posts.
This foundation represents the characteristics of Divine Wisdom while
the posts portray the specific signs by which God guides us. Everything
stems from the foundation and depends upon it for stability.
One last caution before we go on to the various signs
the Lord may give: Believers hungry for wisdom sometimes dedicate
themselves to a study of the Book of Proverbs. But a Christian can
no more attain to wisdom by reading Proverbs than he can get righteousness
by reading the law of Moses. Why? Because, ... one greater than
Solomon is here. Mt. 12:42
The wisdom of Christ is as superior Solomon's as
Christ's righteousness is to that of the law. Solomon's wisdom is
acquired, whereas that of Christ is intrinsic. Solomon learned through
experience and observation. Christ is God's wisdom incarnate.
All of God's Word is to be studied and honored, but not
every portion has the same relevance to the New Testament believer.
God's Word is a progressive revelation, moving from the lesser wisdom
to the greater. While Proverbs encourages a love for wisdom, Jesus
is the fulfillment of it. Ébecome for us wisdom from God — that is, our righteousness,
holiness and redemption. I Cor.1:30 That's why Proverbs can help us to a
degree, but we need more.
As we seek God's will, we must remember an essential
principle: NEVER RELY ON ONE SIGN ONLY. While traveling from Los
Angeles to Houston by car, I noticed that the highway department
had thoughtfully placed signs at regular intervals to reassure the
driver. The long and lonely stretches of desert can cause him to
doubt if he is really on the right road. One signpost isnÕt enough
for the whole trip.
If you receive a dream, a vision, or a prophecy,
regarding an important matter, ask the Lord for two or three other
signs as confirmation. Don't fear that this will displease God. Uncertainty
is no sin if motivated by a sincere desire to please God.
The great Apostle Paul prayed three times for the
Lord to remove his thorn in the flesh. Obviously he passed through
a time when he was unsure of God's will regarding his problem.
People sometimes decry Gideon's lack of faith when
he asked for confirmation via the fleeces. However, if an angel told
me to attack 100,000 armed men, I would want some confirmation too!
I see no scriptural evidence that God gets mad if we aren't sure
of His will. Sometimes He allows this in order to provoke us to seek
Him.
Now let's look at some important
"sign-posts" by which He confirms direction:
SIGN-POST
N¼1: Personal leadings for scripture
As you read the Bible during your daily quiet time,
be attentive to the Holy Spirit within you. God will often illuminate
verses as clues about His will.
We can approach God's Word this way as long as we
keep in mind a couple of key points: First, we must be careful to
take the PRINCIPLE embodied in the text as our guide, and not read
into the text meanings not intended by the writer. Second, we not
attempt to judge others based on what God is telling us.
It should be superfluous to say that God never leads
a person contrary to the principles in His Word. Yet we continue
to meet people who hold to doctrines or leadings totally contrary
to Scripture, based on a dream, inner impression or a prophecy from
someone they respect. Some even claim special "revelation knowledge" superior
to the written Word of God. Well-grounded believers know the difference
between personal leadings from God through the Word, and the evaluation
of doctrine through sound principles of Biblical research.
SIGN-POST
N¼2: Inner peace
Colossians 3:15 Let the peace of Christ rule in
your hearts...
When standing at a crossroads between two decisions,
we can use the peace of God in our hearts to help determine God's
will. In choosing one of the roads at random, your peace may disappear
as you start off on it. This indicates it's the wrong one. Turn around
and go back down the other one. In your peace returns, it's probably
the right choice.
SIGN-POST
N¼3: Godly counsel
Hebrews 13:17 Obey your leaders and submit to
their authority. They keep watch over you as men who must give
an account.
Men of God, seasoned by years of experience, will
usually be able to detect a satanic trap. Better still, they can
sort out those subtle mixtures between truth and error which is a
favorite enemy device to confuse Christians. Every minister knows
that feeling of grief when a believer falls into a trap that could
have been avoided if only the person had come for counsel. He also
knows the joy of the Christian who understands that God often uses
the minister as a safety-check before launching out into something
dubious.
Yet, as with all truths, this one also must be kept
in balance. The clause "them that have the rule over you" is
a misleading translation of one single Greek word, HEGEMON, which
simply means
"guides". The true Christian leader is neither imposing nor dictatorial.
A mountain guide knows the paths to take, where the
cliffs are, and how to use the ropes. But he doesn't walk behind
his followers with a whip and force them to do his bidding.
Some immature ministers view their role as control
and manipulation of others. Some even feel that they have a gift
of knowing God's will for those around them. These make poor counselors.
A few years ago, the "Shepherding"
movement was popular in the U.S. It involved a blind submission to
the authorities of the church. The idea was that the believer would
be broken of innate tendencies toward rebellion and independence,
and thereby grow in Christ. This has just enough truth in it to
be dangerous. True, attitudes of independence characterize many
Christians, and it is difficult for pastors to deal with this.
Yet the Shepherding movement backfired and has largely disappeared.
Why? It inevitably produced spiritual immaturity.
People weren't taught how to hear from God for themselves. It resulted
in Christians with Biblical doctrine but a cult-type mentality. Though
this movement has largely disappeared, a similar pattern of thinking
still exists among some individuals in the ministry. The best pastoral
counsel is that which helps the believer hear from God for himself.
SIGNPOST N¼4: Open doors (Opportunities)
Rev. 3:8 See,
I have placed before you an open door that no one can shut.
I Cor.16:9 because a great door for effective work has opened to me,
and there are many who oppose me.
Notice that Paul mentions adversaries. Sometimes
we misunderstand and suppose that adversaries are a sign that the
leading is erroneous. But the reverse is often true. We are in a
conflict and can expect opposition when God wants us to do something
for Him.
Do the above points guarantee 100% accuracy in knowing
God's will? Certainly not. Since He uses Divine Guidance as a means
to teach wisdom and understanding, and because we never stop learning
in this life, He would be doing us an injustice to allow that. Furthermore,
God wants the element of faith to be always present in our walk with
Him. How could faith be involved if all areas of risk were removed
from guidance?
Insecure Christians tend to insist on 100% certainty
before launching out "in faith" on any decision. This,
of course, is self-contradictory. If we were always sure, how could
faith be involved? Genuine faith steps out, believing that God is
leading, and trusting Him to correct any mistakes.
Those who insist on a perfect system of Divine Guidance
in this life are involved in a futile search. And those who claim
to have found one are self-deceived. Our faith must ultimately rest
in God's ability to direct us rather than the principles themselves,
even though God uses these to guide us.
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