Mad About God by Park J.S
Author:Park, J.S.
Language: eng
Format: epub
Publisher: The Way Everlasting Ministry
Published: 2015-02-15T16:00:00+00:00
You're Missing Out On God's Will:
The Late Night Regret Twitch
When it doesn't work out, many of us believe we've fallen into a mediocre Plan B.
It bothers us pretty bad. The regrets.
You've had the Late-Night Regret Twitch: to mourn over why we couldn't have just done better. There are defining moments in the past where we think, "I should've went to that city. I should've gotten that job. I never should've dated her. I wish I could un-meet him."
My dear friend: If you've really messed it up, I don't believe you can "fall off" God's Will. I don't believe that God's Will could be a fixed straight line. I don't think God ever says, "Well, you fell off the track so good luck in the ditch for the rest of your life."
Many earnest Christians assume that this relationship or this job or this house is the one that God really has for them, so they invest their entire heart into these things. But at any moment, our idea of the future can be upturned. We see it happen all the time. Did that mean God had it coming for them? Does that mean they're now out of line with God's Will and they need to claw for their dream again?
This is crucial because there will be appropriate times to let something go.
I don't believe it's "God's Will" for you to keep one picture of your life by the skin of your teeth. I would never endorse that you can change your mind when you feel like it, nor endorse that you can divorce when it gets hard, nor run out when you're uncomfortable. No one should ever use "God's Will" as a trump-card to burn bridges. We're all called to persevere, to stay determined, to finish strong. But there will be times when you need to correct your entire course, and it's okay to start over. It's unfair to use "God's Will" as an excuse to quit, but also unfair to use it as an iron grip to endure past an expiration date. Both of these are equally dangerous errors.
When I read Scripture, I see that most of the biblical characters had to change choices on the fly. They would run into a dead end, back up, and start again. They spent years in circles. Sometimes God would reveal what to do next; other times they would just pack up and start walking. Their lives were flexible. They didn't have one specific dream. They did mess up, a lot. I'm sure they had tons of Late-Night Regret Twitching. I'm sure, like us, they often thought, "It's too late for me." But in hindsight, the very interruptions and unforeseen circumstances in their lives were part of God's Plan A. Every wrinkle in their story was a new doorway. And God's Will, in the end, wasn't so much about what they were doing, but the kind of person they were becoming. The destination was important, but the journey was the pulse that beat their hearts.
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