How
to KNOW the Will of God - Part 4: Wisdom. Colossians 3:15
We
have been going through a short sort of sub-series on how to understand the
will of God. How do we know the will of God in our life? How do we know what
God wants us to do? How do we go through a process of decision making in coming
to understanding God’s will? In doing this, this is a concept that has come to
be known as the wisdom approach to studying God’s Word and determining God’s
will in our life. The point here is that God guides and directs us only through
His Word overtly, and that covertly He may guide and direct us in other ways
but He is no longer in the process or business of giving special revelation.
The issue today is not doing what was done in the Old Testament time or during
the early church—seeking God’s direct revelatory will for certain
circumstances—but to take His Word that we have learned and studies and
being able to apply that in the issues of our own lives so that God would be
glorified.
Colossians 3:15
is a verse that sounds and has been taken by many to be a divine guidance
passage. NASB “Let the peace of Christ rule in your hearts, to which
indeed you were called in one body; and be thankful.” This is an example of how
verses are often chopped in half,
how often verses and phrases are taken out of context and which sound good as a
stand-alone sentence, but that is not what the context indicates as being
discussed. As has been pointed out in the introduction of these four messages,
this is to be understood not as the peace of God in the sense of internal calm
or tranquillity because somehow now we have hit upon the right decision and God
lets us know it is the right decision because He gives us this internal peace.
The idea here rather is that the peace that we have is an external peace, a
peace within the body of Christ. It is related to the teaching of
reconciliation in Scripture, that we have been reconciled with God so that there
is a vertical reconciliation that has taken place, and because of that vertical
reconciliation and peace with God there is a horizontal peace with God that is
related to others in the body of Christ. Sin is not an issue between us and God
and sin should not be an issue between us and other believers. And we are to
take this objective reality of the peace of God and apply that in our personal
relationships. This is not talking about a principle of decision making in
terms of what I should do with my life and is God going to give me peace with
this decision, but it is that we are to pursue peace, as the writer of Hebrews
says, with all men.
This is indicated in the
second half of the verse where it is talking about our being called into one
body. The focal point, the context of Colossians, starting in about verse 12,
is on forgiveness to one another, loving one another and implementing the
objective reality of the peace that we have with one another in terms of our
personal relationships.
But that does raise the
question: How do we know God’s will? So we have been addressing this as a
counterpoint to what is often taught on this subject, that God has a perfect
will for EVERY decision in life. We emphasise that word because this is
often how this is taught, that whatever the decision is that we have to make in
life God has one and only one will for that. What we have been pointing out is
that that is not what we see in the Scripture because the Scripture does not
tell us in the revelatory passages what we should do in each and every
day—what we should eat, what we should not eat (specifics under the
Mosaic Law, but not today), in the church age it becomes our responsibility to
decide how we can wisely eat. Just because God doesn’t say it is wrong doesn’t
mean it is healthy or wise to eat everything. The Scripture doesn’t tell us it
is not wise, it gives us general principles that we are to then apply in each
of our lives. The Bible doesn’t teach that God had a specific thing in each and
every situation, in every situation, a specific will for us. In fact, this is
really a form of mysticism. It is the idea that for every decision God is
somehow going to reveal to me in some way what decision I should make. But that
involves special revelation.
Special revelation is a
theological term that describes God directly intervening in the normal course
of life by communicating something to man apart from the canon of Scripture.
The canon of Scripture is one form of special revelation but the form we are
talking about here would be something in addition to Scripture.
The issue now is not one
related to making a decision in terms of the specifics but in terms of taking
everything that God has given us and from that foundation applying that in the
decisions that we make. Hebrews 12:14, “Pursue peace with all men,” is part of
God’s will. It is an overt statement, except that this is like a lot of aspects
of God’s overt statements of His will that a lot of people are uncomfortable
with: “I can’t pursue peace with so and so.” Well, why are you even concerned
about the will of God in areas that God doesn’t address when you are not
willing to submit to the will of God in areas He specifically addresses? The
point here is simply that God in His Word gives us hundreds and hundreds of
commandments and prohibitions, and that defines the boundary of His will.
Knowing God’s will is based
on this knowledge of doctrine that has been assimilated in the soul, that God
the Holy Spirit teaches us doctrine and through that He guides and leads us. It
is God the Holy Spirit who works in a covert way rather than an overt way. An
overt way is where some sort of special revelation would be involved. A covert
way is a way that is secret, a way that is not perceived by us, until the
events are over with. Then we look back at the events and the course of
decision making that we made and we recognise that even though at the time we
may not have been consciously aware (probably never consciously aware) how God
the Holy Spirit was orchestrating circumstances and events we can look back on
it and see that He was.
When we approach decisions,
though, we don’t know about these factors. All we know is what the Word of God
has told us and what we have learned. And in the process of learning we
accumulate what Scripture calls wisdom. Wisdom is not something that is easily
learned. Wisdom in Scripture is not like overt, objective principles that in
cases of X you always do Y. There are certain elements of that but generally
wisdom applies where there is no direct statement of Scripture. You are not
facing a decision that involves a moral issue, a decision that involves a
specifically overtly spiritual issue—although that affects everything at
some level; you are facing a decision that appears from every overt vantage
point to be something of a neutral issue: whether or not you should work for
this company of that company, whether you should live in this city or that
city, whether or that you should go to this university or that university, buy
this house or that house, etc. None of the factors here or that present
themselves to you necessarily involve a moral issue. If they do, and they have
to compromise spiritual standards in this area, then you know that that is not
a positive for making that decision.
The concept of wisdom in
Scripture is the concept related to the skilful application of God’s Word, and
that may be applied in a number of different ways. This ultimately, though, is
under the ministry of God the Holy Spirit. Scripture says that we are to walk by
means of the Holy Spirit, and He is the one then who guides and directs us. We
can only walk by the Spirit if we are walking in accordance with God’s Word.
Some of the passages that
touch on this would be: Colossians 4:12 NASB “Epaphras,
who is one of your number, a bondslave of Jesus
Christ, sends you his greetings, always laboring
earnestly for you in his prayers, that you may stand perfect and fully assured
in all the will of God.” The word “labouring” is the Greek word agonizo, which is the idea of intensely
working towards something. It has come over into English as “agony.” It
involves someone who is doing something intensely and purposefully, and Epaphras is labouring intensely in his prayers. Paul is
just emphasising that he is praying consistently for this congregation, for the
purpose that they may “stand perfect and fully assured in all the will of God.”
The word “perfect” is teleios
indicating maturity, and the word “fully assured” is a word based on pleroo and it has the idea of being full
or complete or sufficient. In other words, what Epaphras
is praying for is that the members of this congregation would reach spiritual
maturity, continue to grow and not fall by the wayside. And the way that this
happens is “in all the will of God.” The means of growth is by knowing the will
of God. We know from other passages that the means of growth is the Word of
God, and so the place of knowing the will of God is in His Word, not through
some sort of external, mystical insight into God’s plan or God directly
revealing something to us.
Romans 12:2 is another
passage that indicates an objective sense of the will of God as revealed in the
Scripture. We are not to be conformed to the world, i.e. the zeitgeist or the spirit of the age, but
we are to be transformed by the renewing of our thinking for the purpose that
our lives demonstrate what the will of God is; that by walking according to the
revealed standards of God’s we demonstrate that that is what is good and
acceptable and perfect, or that which brings to maturity or completion.
Ephesians 5:17
NASB “So then do not be foolish, but understand what the will of the
Lord is.” This precedes another important verse, verse 18, “be filled with the
Spirit.” What is important about verse 17 is that in the context of Ephesians 5
there is the emphasis on being wise and the use of time, and then it is
contrasted with not being foolish. These are not absolutely distinct
categories; they are generally broader categories than right or wrong. Some
things are wiser than other things; there is more of a sliding scale there.
Some things are more foolish than other things. So how do we avoid being
foolish? We have to understand what the will of the Lord is. And in the context
of Ephesians 5 that is walking in the truth again, it is following the
objective revelation of God.
Ephesians 6:6, we are not
to work for our employers or masters by way of eye service or men pleasers. NASB
“not by way of eyeservice, as men-pleasers, but as
slaves of Christ, doing the will of God from the heart,” i.e. obeying Scripture
and totally and completely serving Christ, recognising that whoever we work for
we are not working for them we are really working for Christ in that position.
All of that is to
demonstrate that the will of God is something that we can know. It is not a
guessing game, it is something we can know and we can know it because God has
already revealed it to us in His Word.
It is through God the Holy
Spirit, though, that we come to really implement that in our life. As we learn
doctrine, learn what the Scripture teaches, the Holy Spirit is the one who
stores that in our souls. This is the whole process the Scripture talks
about—walk by means of the Spirit, walking in the truth, walking in the
light. It is God the Holy Spirit who is the one who, as we walk by the Spirit,
takes the Word and He helps us to understand it and stores that in our souls so
that at the time we need to apply it He is the one who works to bring it to our
attention so that we can then apply it. It is that realm of application that is
what the Bible talks about in terms of wisdom.
Along with specific
teaching for specific situations—and there are clearly those in the
Scripture—there is also doctrine which just produces wisdom. It gives a
framework of thinking. Illustration: We make a lot of decisions in life. We
have made many decisions and by the grace of God have not felt the consequences
of many of our wrong and foolish decisions. And by God’s grace we have on
occasion made wise decisions in applying God’s Word. An irony in the whole
process of decision is that many of the most determinative decisions, the most
significant decisions that we make, are made before we are 21 years old when we
don’t have much wisdom and we have a lot of foolishness. We make decisions
related to career choices, decisions related to how we respond to authority, to
our involvement in church, spirituality, marriage, children, and many other
things today that have incredible consequences for the rest of our life. It is
possible to make some decisions before we are 21 that really do limit future
options. On the other hand, there are opportunities to make extremely wise
decisions before 21 or 22 that open up tremendous vistas of opportunity later
on in life. So when we are growing up, and this is what parental training is
about, we need to develop a framework of thinking about life so that out of
that framework we make wise decisions rather than foolish decisions. Often what
is seen as Christians respond to the pressures of the world around us to
conform to it in terms of ideals, in terms of careers and many other things, is
that in the decisions that we make that are determinative—such as where
we are going to go to college, what we are going to study in college, what kind
of career we are going to pursue—we get caught up in answering a lot of
questions when we don’t pay attention to the ultimate question that we should
be concerned about as believers. That is, how can I best serve God with my
life?
So when my question is how
I can go to college, get a good education, and make good money, that is maybe
going to have a different answer than the question of where I can best serve
God with my life. The result may not be seen in the answers to those two
questions for ten or fifteen years, but if you pursue the career goal (without
knocking high education) we can make choices to go to X university instead of Y
university that put us in a different geographical area, a different social
area, under different influences some of which may be good and some not, and in
a place where we don’t have any opportunity for Christian fellowship, biblical
teaching to keep our focus on the ultimate priorities. And ten or fifteen years
down the road we are saying, where did I mess up, why isn’t my life what I
thought it would be when I was eighteen or nineteen years old? The reason is
that some decisions that were made that did not appear to be morally or
spiritually significant were not answered with wisdom but with a sort of
self-absorbed foolishness that is now bearing bad fruit. So we need to be very
concerned about this whole concept, especially in teaching young people, about
how we make wise decisions, and that wisdom comes out of a framework, a
building as it were; and if we think about it as a gardener, it is packing the
soul with the right kind of soil so that it produces a certain kind of decision
making and maybe not too many weeds. If we don’t have that as part of the mix
in the soul when we make decisions then we are not always going to make the
right decisions because there is not enough of God’s Word in our soul to orient
us in the right decision.
So a wisdom decision is
related to the application of doctrine to a decision where the test is not
always the final decision. In other words, are we going to make the right
decision or the wrong decision? The issue is how we make the decision, the
process—taking it before God, making sure that the questions we are
asking in relation to the decision relate to a biblical scale of values and
priorities and not in terms of what might be called the world’s standards of
personal success and achievement. We focus on God’s spiritual success and
achievement. It is this store of doctrine and this framework that gives us the
discernment to recognise when some decisions may involve a distinct geographic
or a distinct operational will from God. That only comes from maturity, and if
we are practicing in the small decisions the principles of seeking God’s will
and applying wisdom to those decisions then later in life when it comes to
significant decisions we have built a pattern and a framework for doing that.
The geographical will of
God relates to operating in a specific location. For example, Jonah is Nineveh;
Paul in Rome. God did not overtly reveal to Nehemiah
in Nehemiah chapter one that Nehemiah should go to Jerusalem.
That was a wisdom decision. Out of all of the knowledge that Nehemiah had out
of God’s Word, when he looked at what was going on in Jerusalem—the
fortifications not being completed, the city was defenceless, and no progress
was being made—from his framework of the knowledge of Scripture he knew
that that was not what God wanted. So he went to the Lord in prayer as to what
could be done. He is not thinking, Lord, do you want me to go to Jerusalem
and finish the wall? That question is never asked. Instead what he prays is
that God would give him wisdom in bringing this attention to the king and then
when he does that the king sends him. So we see how God is working behind the
scenes and moves Nehemiah there, but it is not because Nehemiah says he wants
to decide whether he should go there or not. So that is the difference between
a directive revelation of God—Jonah, go to Nineveh;
Paul, go to Rome—or a non-directive approach.
The next point relates to
the operational will of God, which includes how we use our spiritual gifts and
natural talents and abilities. We all are born with certain natural talents and
abilities. Then we have spiritual gifts. Some people say they don’t have the
spiritual gift of singing. That is not a spiritual gift. Unbelievers can sing.
We may have a natural talent of music and the ability to sing and then that is
wedded with a spiritual gift of service. And so we can serve in the
congregation by singing in the choir or being an anchor point within the
congregation on singing. That is how we serve the Lord. There are lots of
different ways in which we serve the Lord with a spiritual gift that entails
and utilises natural gifts as well, and these are brought together. But
ultimately the question is, what is the best way for me to utilise my natural
gifts and my spiritual gifts for the ministry within the body? Because spiritual gifts are given to every individual for the
purpose of ministering to one another, not outside the church but within the
local body. So the question needs to be, how do I think I can best utilize
my natural gifts, my spiritual gifts to serve the body? That is the operational
will of God.
An example from Scripture
of how these three categories of God’s will work that we have been talking
about in terms of God’s revealed will, His permissive will and His overriding
will. In Numbers 22 Baalam is the prophet for hire.
He is probably an Old Testament believer but he utilising whatever abilities he
has in an extremely illegitimate manner. He is charging for it, making money
for it, and maybe he is using some occult arts in the process, and he has
developed a reputation. This is at the time that the Israelites are at the end
of their forty years of discipline in the desert and are beginning to move
north on the east side of the Jordan river valley toward the Territory of Moab,
and they are going to enter into the land that God has promised them. The Moabites
are under the leadership of Balak who is threatened
by this approaching mob of two to three-million people moving through the
wilderness and he thinks they are going to attack him. He wants to destroy them
and so using a pagan mentality is going to get Balaam to come and curse the
Jews so that they will not be successful in attacking him.
As this unfolds because God
is omniscient and aware of what is going on some direct revelation is going to
be given to Balaam. Numbers 22:9 NASB “Then God came to Balaam and
said, ‘Who are these men with you?’” Balaam tells Him who are and God said,
direct revelation, [12] “…“Do not go with them; you shall not curse the people,
for they are blessed.” It doesn’t get any clearer than that. What is God’s will
for Balaam’s life? At this point in time it is not to go with the people who
invited him and not to curse Israel. But Balaam has
his own volition and he is looking at the money. He really wants to go with
them and so he is going to try to work out some sort of compromise.
Numbers 22:13
NASB “So Balaam arose in the morning and said to Balak’s
leaders, ‘Go back to your land, for the LORD has refused to let me go with you.’ [14] The leaders of Moab
arose and went to Balak and said, ‘Balaam refused to come
with us.’” They understand that Balaam really wants to and so they entice him
with a little more money. This time God comes to him and gives him permission.
This isn’t what God in His revealed will really wants Balaam to do. The first
command is really the overriding command: I don’t want you to go. But Balaam is
going to exercise his volition now and is going to go anyway, so God gives him
permission to go but still keeps the restrictions in place. But just because
God allows something to happen doesn’t mean it is right. God’s highest will is
for the right decisions based on Scripture to be followed. Anything less than
that, which is wrong or evil or sinful, is simply the result of God’s
permissive will. He allows people to make bad decisions but God isn’t
validating those bad decisions.
If we listen carefully to
the way people say things, something happens and it is not really what they
think is the best thing, and they try to comfort themselves: Well that’s God’s
will. No, God allowed that crafty, sinful, horrible thing to happen. But don’t
try to comfort yourself by thinking that that makes it any better. They are
trying to somehow accept a wrong situation, but it is still a wrong situation.
God’s permissive will means that He allows evil things to happen. That is not
because He wants in a moral, right sense for those things to happen. So don’t
try to blame God for bad things. What you have just done is blame God for man’s
evil decisions. You can’t do that.
So this is the permissive
will of God but there are still moral restrictions on this will. Numbers 22:20 NASB
“God came to Balaam at night and said to him, ‘If the men have come to call
you, rise up {and} go with them; but only the word which I speak to you shall
you do.’” You are not going to be able to say anything that I don’t allow. Then
we have the overruling will of God that happens later on, and that is that
Balaam is going to go along and try to curse them but God doesn’t let him. God
overrules his volition at key times. He doesn’t overrule every bad decision
that people make. The angel of the Lord appears later on to block Balaam’s
actions reminds him again that he is not going to be able to say anything
unless the Lord allows him to.
The point here is that even
if you make a wrong decision related to God’s geographic will or His
operational will, God’s overriding will kicks in an resolves the problem. We
can’t miss out on God’s will—just like Jonah. Let’s say you really want
to do God’s will and God is His sovereign will (which He hasn’t revealed to
you) would like for you to go to this location rather than that location. You
sit down and pray, you consult with friends, you do everything you know you
should do. You decide to do A instead of B. But God wants you to do B.
Everything is going to shut down on A and it is going
to end of where all you can do is B. You don’t have to guess it ahead of time
and try to figure that out; you just trust in the Lord, do the best you can,
and God is going to direct your paths.
We see this same kind of principle
in Acts 15:6-22 where we see Paul and Barnabas making decisions; notice how
they do it. They don’t pray, they don’t ask, God shall we go back and revisit?
It is, “It seems best to us,” and so they just make a decision to go back and
revisit those cities to re-establish things that are going on there.
Acts chapter fifteen is
where we have what is called the Jerusalem Council meeting. Again and again we
see them making certain kinds of decisions. In 15:25
when the Council makes its final decision, it doesn’t say this is God’s will.
They don’t say God told us to do this. They say, “It seemed good to us.” Three
verses later: [28] “For it seemed good to the Holy Spirit and to us to lay upon
you no greater burden than these essentials.” What they have done is they have
taken all of the information and have come to a decision. They don’t this is
what God told them to do. So that is a wisdom approach to the Scriptures.
Every incident of the
specific will of God that we have in Scripture we only know because there is
special revelation involved. The point is, don’t expect God to be doing
something He is not doing anymore. He is no longer in the process of giving
specific revelation. He has given that to us and He wants to know what we will
do with it. That is the test. Are we will to study the Word and let it become
so much a part of our life that we can make wise decisions, or not? That is the
issue.
In the Old Testament are
also a couple of cases with Nehemiah. He has an interesting phrase: “God put
this in my heart.” He is not making a specific revelatory claim, but after the
fact he realises that God was guiding and directing him, and that those
thoughts that he had and the ideas that he had really had their source in God.
It seemed that God had put those things on his mind. Nehemiah 2:2; 7:5. But
most of the other decision making that Nehemiah makes, he makes on the basis of
just applying the Word to the circumstances that he found.
In conclusion what we
should take away from this is that when we face decisions in life there are two
kinds of decision basically. There is one kind which has been referred to as
moral decisions or immoral decisions. These are decisions that involve clear
biblical revelation of what is right and what is wrong. And that is God’s
clearly revealed will. Then there are other decisions in other areas of life
that don’t involve specifics of God’s revelation. They don’t involve specific
statements of something being right ands something being wrong. So we recognise
that in those decisions what we are doing is we are taking from the whole realm
of doctrine that is in our soul and are applying it then to those specific
situations.