Saturday, August 16, 2014

God's will--something to prove?


               A framed picture about God’s will hung on a granite wall where two main elevators “ferried” visitors at what was then St. John’s Hospital in 1977.  I firmly believed the message which claimed nothing happens apart from God willing it so was terribly wrong.  Our premature son spent just a brief part of his 17 days of life at that hospital, and I was and still am convinced that the diseases that took his life were not of God’s intended “good plans” for him.

               Many books have been written about God’s will, others exploring why bad things happen to good people.  I make no claim to have everything figured out on this subject, but I do think it is important for us as Christians to be very careful and discerning about what we choose to believe concerning God and His will at work in our world. 

               After our son’s death, I “discovered” Jer. 29:11—“I know the plans I have for you, plans for good and not for evil . . .” at a Bible study one evening.  I knew little about the book of Jeremiah at the time, but I thought this statement was a very clear indication that God’s plans were for good in general.  This seemed to be a fundamental standard to measure life’s events, including the terrible illnesses that had afflicted our son and other children I saw in the neonatal unit at Children’s Hospital when I visited Dan there.

               In the Lord’s Prayer, the only real one Jesus taught that was recorded, He instructed us to pray “Thy kingdom come, Thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven.”  Why would we be encouraged to ask for God’s will to be done if whatever happens is His will anyway?  And if things here are to be as they are in heaven, there is no sickness there.

               A scripture that has been a stirring one to me for many years is in Romans 12: 2:  “And do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind, so that you may prove what the will of God is, that which is good and acceptable and perfect.”  First, “good,” “acceptable,” “perfect,” seem to leave out much of what is awful about our human existence—disease, war, hunger, hate, etc.  But more interesting is the presentation of God’s will as something to be proved, a process God wants us to sacrificially offer our very lives to.

               One of Webster’s definitions for “prove” is “to establish the truth or validity of by evidence or demonstration.”  In this Roman’s verse, God’s will then is something to be proven, to be established as true by  evidence.  Jesus did this over and over again in his ministry.  He taught about God but He also demonstrated the compassion and power of God over natural elements, like storms, over disease by healing multitudes who came to Him for help.  Never was anyone turned away; never was a disease stronger than the power of God to heal.

               I have an Amy Grant CD called “Hymns for the Journey.”  As the title suggests, there are well-known hymns but some with new arrangements or additions.  One of my favorite is “Come Thou Fount of Every Blessing” which contains some additional lines.  One that I especially like is this:  “May I still Thy goodness prove.” 

When I listen to this CD as I did today, that line is my prayer.  Jesus asks us still, what do you believe about Me?  He told Lazarus’s sisters He was the resurrection and the life—to just believe no matter how things looked.  Anything is possible with God if we seek Him for the faith to believe in what looks impossible.  "Infinite possibilities born of faith” Mother Theresa called them.  It’s all from God and intended for His glory.

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