Whatever you decide, Father, let’s do that.
Corrie ten Boom (and countless others) have said this life is like a weaving, the underside of which being all we ever see. The master weaver blends in dark and gold for a pattern only he sees. Eventually, but only when we get “on top,” will we see the pattern. Until then, we will walk by faith.
We said in “Number 3” above that the biggest element is our faith. But the greatest expression of our faith is submission to the will of the Father.
In Gethsemane, Jesus wanted the Father to save mankind by any other method if one was available. But there wasn’t. He prayed, “O my Father, if it is possible, let this cup pass from me; nevertheless, not as I will, but as you will” (Matthew 26:39).
That’s where we have to leave this subject.
We are to ask Him. We are to ask in faith. We are to submit ourselves to His hands to do with as He pleases. But we are not to demand, not to be presumptuous, and not to claim what He has not promised.
Nothing about this is simple. If it were, good people would not differ.
Someone once said, “We read the Bible and interpret it away to nothing. One of these days, someone is going to come along and read it and believe it, and the world will be changed forever.”
That sounds so good, I promise you it will garner a truckload of “amens” at a preacher’s meeting. The only problem is it’s wrong.
God’s word always has to be interpreted. It must not be taken out of context and made to mean what was never intended.
Let the people of the Lord demand that their teachers and pastors give them the whole teaching of God and not isolated bits and pieces which they’ve turned into cure-alls. Let the people of God grow up in their love for all the Word and their appreciation for ministers who cater not to the fancies of the shallow but to the Savior who said, “Feed my sheep” (John 21:17).
In the meantime, while we are in this world with needs galore all about us, my friends, let us be faithful in praying. Let us pray in faith. But let us then leave the results in the hands of the Lord, giving thanks for all that comes, whatever comes.
6. As always, leave room in your understanding of doctrine for mystery.
There is the mystery of prayer. The mystery of godliness. The mystery of God’s will. And the mystery of righteousness,
Some day we will have a full understanding. But not yet. We will walk by faith or drop by the wayside.
Let us be faithful.
This blog was originally published on http://joemckeever.com. Used with permission.
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