Stuck on a Thought

OK, I admit it, I believe that I have moved from passionate pondering to obsessive preoccupation with phrase “God’s Will” or “the will of God.” I have been hanging out in 1 Peter and Peter uses both phrases. Where I really got started was 1 Peter 4 where Peter tells his audience to put the things of the the world behind them and live for the will of God. In my last posting I explored the idea of what I see as a corporate understanding of the will of God or God’s will, but as I think about it now the ideas that I expressed in my last posting are the beliefs that move me to action. Other people may key in on other beliefs. That is not to say we can accept some beliefs and reject others, rather I see God putting a passion in our heart to really focus our energy in one or two areas so as not to over extend ourself. We need to do one thing and do it very well.

I think what I was doing was making a connection between God’s will for our life and God’s purpose or plans for our life. I think there is a connection there, but not the way I was thinking. The connection I see is that “God’s will” is the internal calibrating beliefs and values that we live by. Our purpose then is to act on those beliefs and put them into service for God. In James we are told to put our faith into action, not to earn our salvation or rewards, but rather to show others the faith that we proclaim.
My question is what beliefs are you living out? How have you grounded your beliefs, in the Bible or in the world? Do your actions truly reflect what you say you believe?

God’s Will –

In 1 Peter 4 we are told to not live as the world around us lives, but rather our lives should reflect God’s will. This has gotten me thinking about this subject of God’s will, not the “Oh this must have been God’s will”, rather I am wondering if there is not a “universal” God’s will as well as God’s will for our life as an individual.

Here are a couple of thoughts about God’s will for all Christ-followers. I start in Matt 22 where Jesus is confronted by the Pharisees and responds to their question about the greatest commandment by telling them that we need to love God with all our heart, soul, and mind and to love our neighbors. From this I see God’s will as loving Him and loving others. This to me seems the foundation for living out God’s will. If we love God and love others we will naturally want to share the Gospel message with them (i.e. the great commission). Loving God would hopefully lead us into wanting a deeper, more intimate relationship with Him, growing to be more like Him, allowing the fruits of the Spirit to flow through us and out of us to those around us.
More to come on this later…

Taking Time To Ponder

These last couple of weeks have been a little busy. Writing for my doctoral studies, Oshkosh for the air show (great time with my small group), and preparing for and presenting at a distance ed conference. I’m glad I was on a study break from work, though I was pulled in a lot more than I had planned. Oh well, that will allow me a a little more time to ponder and write at a later date.

All that to say I have not had as much time to ponder or blog as I had hoped. What I have been pondering is the beginning of 1 Peter 4, where we are told to have the same attitude as Christ as He suffered, not live as the world around us lives, but rather live out the will of God. So what does it mean to not “live for evil human desires, but rather for the will of God” (1 Peter 4:2). I understand the first part. There are things in our life that we need to put to death, borrowing some Pauline wording there. Things we have done or things that we are doing that do not honor God, enhance our relationships with God and others, or that cause other to ask why we don’t do the things the world does. I get this. I don’t always succeed but I get it.
This putting things behind us is a process. When we begin it is easy to peel away the things we don’t want to do, but as we dig deeper it gets tougher. Here I am not really talking about the behavior, rather we need to get to the root, the belief and values that result in an unwanted behavior. Change these or replace these with Biblically ground beliefs and values and desirable behaviors will follow.
What comes next will take a little more pondering. How does one live for the will of God? Is there a universal “will of God” or is this different for each individual? I think that it is a both/and. More thoughts on this in my next posting.