Knowing God’s Will, part 3;
1 Cor. 16:5-11
We hear people
talk about the “still small voice” which comes out of the episode with Elijah,
but that is under the category of special revelation. The term “special revelation”
is a term that refers to God objectively communicating to a believer, and we
believe that special revelation ceased at two different times in history. It
ceased in about the fifth century BC when God quit
communicating to the prophets of Israel and there was a period of silence from
approximately about 420-430 BC up until the birth of Jesus Christ—no special
revelation, no appearance of angels, no prophecy, no communication. Then,
again, with the close of the canon of Scripture in approximately 95 AD God is silent again. And when there is no special revelation the
issue is making decisions based on the doctrine that is in the believer’s soul,
not based on God particularly giving some sort of insight, some sort of special
sign as to what you should do, what you should not do. In evangelicalism there
are usually two different approaches to the will of God. One emphasizes the
fact that God has a specific plan and purpose for every decision in life. The
other position is, yes indeed, God does have a plan and purpose for your life
but that is under the guise of God’s sovereign will and He is going to guide and
direct us, but He does it primarily through His Word and then through secondary
sources. But when it comes to knowing what God wants us to do in a particular decision,
e.g. buying a house, a career opportunity, marriage, etc., frankly if you just
start getting concerned about the will of God when you hit the major decisions
you have pretty much failed the test. The issue is making those decisions on a
day-to-day basis. The emphasis is on the little decisions. If we take some time
to reflect on our own lives we may well be able to look back and see that the
momentous events in our life actually turned on what may have been very minor
and what appeared to be very insignificant decisions. We have to focus on not
only what appear to us to be the major consequential decisions but the
day-to-day decisions of life. So the overriding issue is, are we in fellowship?
Are we applying the doctrine that we know, that is in our soul? Is our motivation
to serve God and to glorify Him? Those are the top three questions. If we can
answer yes to each of those questions then we will be operating within the will
of God.
The issue really
is sticking with the Word and applying the Word, the doctrine from your own soul,
and this approach to decision-making is generally termed the wisdom approach.
It is learning how to make decisions from the framework of divine viewpoint in your
soul. You have to have divine viewpoint in your soul and you have to go through
a growth process of maturity by making decisions based on the doctrine you have
in your soul. Because when the serious decisions come along, when the important
decisions come along, if you do not have a track record and a habit pattern
which includes prayer, application of doctrine, walking by means of the Spirit,
then you are just generally thrown on your own resources and you probably are
going to end up making a decision based on the flesh, justifying it by some
sort of doctrinal rationale, and end up making a screwy decision from a
position of weakness.
The
doctrine of the will of God (cont.)
9)
Scriptural
examples of decision making. Most of these examples of decision making and
knowing the will of God are examples where God is giving objective revelation.
The first two examples have to do with avoiding the will of God. Gideon and
Jonah both knew the will of God objectively, and instead of applying and
obeying instantly the mandate of God they tried to avoid the implications of
God’s mandates. So these are not examples of how to know God’s will, they are
really examples of how to avoid God’s will. Judges 6 is a situation of where
The
same thing happens with Jonah. Jonah 1:1 NASB “The word of the LORD came to
Jonah the son of Amittai saying, [2] ‘Arise, go to
Even
though Jonah is operating in disobedience, if we as believers are filled with
the Spirit, are applying doctrine, and we decide to go to place A instead of
location B that God will gently prevent us from ever getting into location A
and we will get to location B. He will make it clear. God guides and directs, we can’t avoid His will. If He has a specific place for
us, a specific time to do certain things, then we will be there. So we shouldn’t
worry about it. We are not to get into this subjectivity of thinking that
somehow we missed the will of God. The key issue is our underlying attitude.