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God wants us to know his will even more than we want to know it.
Why then is it often so difficult to discover?
Why doesn't he tell us outright?
He does not want
unthinking robots who are programmed to do his bidding but mature
children who share their Father's concern for the world. He wants us to
research and think through facts and feel his compassion and end up
asking for that which pleases him. It helps us to know him better.
As we prayerfully evaluate
overseas needs and opportunities, our gifts and training, our
circumstances and God's Word, we develop a conviction about the course
we should take–an assurance difficult to acquire any other way.
Even the great Apostle
Paul had to find his guidance as we do. Acts 16 records that on his
second journey he and his team visited their churches in the regions of
Phrygia and Galatia. This part of God's guidance was clear because these
new churches needed follow-up. Paul believed God then wanted them to
continue on the highway into the Roman province of Asia–probably to
Ephesus, its largest city. But his timing was wrong. How did the Holy
Spirit forbid them? Were the roads impassable? Was there an epidemic?
Did the Roman soldiers at the crossroads stop them? Whatever the
circumstances, Paul knew the Holy Spirit was closing the door.
He and his team traveled
north to Mysia, and tried to turn east into Bithynia. God closed that
door, too. So they went west to Troas. It was not on Paul's itinerary
but it was accessible. God had to get Paul to Troas so he could turn his
steps to Europe! (How can you steer a ship until it lifts anchor and
leaves harbor?)
Europe did not yet figure
in Paul's long-range plans, so in Troas God gave him a vision of "a man
from Macedonia." Luke, who had come from Macedonia, joined the team in
Troas. (Did he arrive before or after Paul's vision?) The team evaluated
the facts and quickly concluded they should go to the city of Philippi,
an important city in Macedonia. (Acts 16)
So how are we to go about
seeking God's guidance? Here are some principles.
I. Discerning God's
leading
1. Seek to do God's will
every day. Why should he say anything more to us if we disregard what he
has already said? Jesus says, "Why do you call me Lord, Lord, and do not
what I say?" (Lk. 6:46) He says, "If you love me you will keep my
commandments." (Jn. 14:1523) Start by obeying what you already know God
has commanded. Learn to hear God's voice in small daily matters. This is
good practice for major decisions.
2. Use common sense. But
we do not need God's special guidance on everything. We do not need to
ask each morning whether to get up or to dress. We would not usually ask
if we should wear the brown suit or the blue one to work, because it is
probably indifferent. Choose the one you prefer. The Lord does not seek
to control each detail in our lives. Packer says rightly, that to ask
for specific guidance for every detail of our day is not spirituality.
Rather, it leads to a "frantic bewilderment or lunacy." A 12year old who
needs the guidance of a two-year old is abnormal. God expects some
maturity in us from his constant teaching, his past guidance and our
life experiences. He is not likely to give special guidance where common
sense or his Word should suffice.
3. Study the Bible for
guidance. Regular Bible study saturates us with knowledge of what God
thinks about everything, what his long-range plans are and how he acts.
Jesus said, "If you abide in me and my words abide in you, then ask
whatever you will and it will be done for you." (Jn. 15:7) "Thy word is
a lamp to my feet and a light to my path." (Psa.119:105)
A good understanding of
Scripture helps keep us from mistaking God's guidance because he never
guides anyone contrary to his written Word.
But seek guidance in
clearly stated principles and in the lives of godly people in the Bible.
Learn from Abraham's mistakes and imitate his faith. But the advice of
Job's friends is as bad for us as it was for him. The pagan prostitute
Rahab was commended for her new faith in God, not her lies and low
morals. The dishonest steward in Luke 16 is praised for his prudence in
preparing for his future, but verse 10 condemns even his smallest
dishonesties. God wants us to apply biblical principles to our
circumstances.
4. Desire to do whatever
God says. Do we already want one answer so much that we are not open to
others? God expects us to have preferences. He may even give us desires
so he can fulfil them. (Phil. 2:13) But we must examine our motivation.
If we are not willing to do whatever he says, we are double-minded and
must ask him to make us willing.
5. Rely on God's promise
to guide. "I will instruct you and teach you the way you should go; I
will counsel you with my eye upon you" (Psa. 32:8). If you obey, "the
Lord will guide you continually" (Isa.58:11). "Who is the man (or woman)
that fears the Lord? Him will he instruct in the way that he should
choose" (Psa. 25:12). "In all thy ways acknowledge him, and he shall
direct thy paths"(Prov. 3:6). Paul prays the Colossians will be "filled
with the knowledge of his will" (Col.1: 9). J. I. Packer says the Holy
Spirit lives in us to teach and to guide, and for us to doubt his
ability or willingness would be a slur on his ministry.
6. Ask God for guidance.
"If any one lacks wisdom, let him ask of God, who gives to everyone
generously and without reproaching, and it will be given him. But let
him ask in faith, with no doubting, for he who doubts is like a wave of
the sea that is driven and tossed by the wind." (Jas. 1:58) This does
not mean you must be sure of the answer, but you must be specific about
your request. A "double-minded," wavering person, with mixed motives,
will not be answered. We cannot ask God for his will, and then
contemplate whether or not to obey. He may not guide until we are ready
to obey.
James does not say that if
we believe hard enough God will answer. Prayer is not convincing
ourselves that God will give the answer we wish. Prayer is not twisting
God's arm to do for us what he otherwise would not do. Our prayers free
him to do what he longed to do from the start. He works through us, but
does not force our wills. Nor can our faith force his hand. But our
faith frees him to act, and opens us up to hear.
We must ask. God works
mainly through us. He already knows what we need. But do we know? The
rule of the Father's house is that the children must bring their
requests to him. He longs to have us in his presence; our needs bring us
there.
"Let us with confidence
draw near to the throne of grace, that we may find mercy and grace to
help in the time of need." (Heb. 4:16)
7. Clarify the request in
writing. God says, "Take with you words." (Hosea 14:2) The Holy Spirit
usually does not speak to us in words except to recall to our minds the
words of Scripture. But he does says yes or no to the words we bring to
him. Writing helps because it requires us to think through the issues
and to define our thoughts. If our requests are fuzzy we may not
recognize answers when they come. Too often we say, "Everything worked
out," and fail to see God's answer to a specific prayer. Keep a prayer
journal!
8. Believe that God is
guiding. Believe your discoveries are not accidental, but that God is
speaking through the data you uncover in a variety of ways. Not all of
it will be relevant, but we must be alert to what God may be saying
through items of information. It helps to record what seems significant
in a prayer notebook.
Rest the matter with him.
"Trust in the Lord with all your heart and lean not on your own
understanding. In all your ways acknowledge him and he will direct your
paths. Be not wise in your own eyes." (Prov. 3:5,6) "Have no anxiety
about anything, but in everything by prayer and supplication with
thanksgiving let your requests be made known to God. And the peace of
God, which passes all understanding, will keep (guard, sustain) your
hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus." (Phil. 4:6,7)
9. Watch for guidance in
your daily devotions–in the sequence of Bible passages you are reading.
In 1957, after three years in Peru, I believed God wanted me to begin
university fellowships in another South American country, so I applied
for positions in several secular schools. Then I returned to California
to spend Christmas with my family. It made sense to wait here until I
had a new job contract. I hoped it would come quickly so I could stop in
Peru on my way south to help put on the university conference we had
planned. But I had enough money only for the air fare and one month's
room and board. If I went, and a job was offered, I would be in trouble.
Did God expect me to take such a big step of faith?
That was what I asked him
as I began my regular morning reading, which happened to be in Acts 13.
I read that Abraham left his home at God's command, by faith, not
knowing his ultimate destination! The words jumped out at me. (I had not
expected to find Abraham in Acts!) Was God telling me to go? He knew I
would read that passage that morning. I became convinced it was God's
answer to my question. So I flew off to Peru. The conference was
fruitful, and a job finally came through–in Brazil–but that is another
story!
10. Evaluate your
circumstances. They can make God's will so clear that obedience, not
guidance, is required.
Gary wanted to go to China
in August. He would leave behind his pregnant wife and their toddler for
six months, as house guests with friends. After the baby was born she
was to travel to China alone with the two babies. It became such an
issue she would not let him mention China. But he relied on his inner
impressions alone and went to China against the counsel of family and
friends. His wife filed separation papers. He finally broke his contract
and flew home to salvage his fragile marriage.
Muriel, in the U.S. on
leave from short-term service in Spain, bought a ticket to return.
Circumstances should have told her the timing was wrong. Her grandmother
was dying and her family (not firm Christians) begged her to wait. But
she left, although she had no deadline in Spain and no specific
assignment. She later claimed God had given her such great faith that
even a death in the family could not delay her. But she ignored God's
principles of love and concern for family.
God can change your
circumstances. Record even small changes as partial answers. Believe God
is working on the problem. As all God's words are actions (he fulfils
them) so all God's actions are words (he speaks through them). Ask what
he is trying to tell you through each change. No single one may
convince, but the cumulative effect of several may be compelling.
11. Seek information about
all possible options. God guides largely through information we
prayerfully evaluate. But he does not do the research for us. That we
take the initiative to ferret out facts is a test of how much we want
his will. Jesus said that asking does not make seeking and knocking
unnecessary. (Mt. 7:79) But it can guarantee their success.
12. Seek the counsel of
informed Christian friends. They should be people who know you well. But
if they lack facts or are not committed to missions, their counsel may
not be better than your own. It is seldom helpful to ask someone who
will automatically agree or disagree with you. I recall a man who would
present his problems to his pastor in a way that would cause the pastor
to agree. Then he would cite the pastor as his main guidance!
Do consult your pastor and
church missions committee. But remember that some otherwise fine pastors
have little interest in missions and even less in tentmaking. Some
dissuade applicants from tentmaking because they do not understand it
and they have confidence only in formal Christian workers. (A few GO
Papers on tentmaking might help them understand this option better.)
13. When the deadline
arrives make a logical decision. Trust that God has been guiding you.
List the pros and cons, evaluate them prayerfully and then make a
logical decision–the one that seems right. This step has helped take
some of the agony out of decision-making for me.
If at the deadline two
options seem equally good, God may be asking "Which would you rather
do?" There is not always just one right place. Jane called to ask if she
should accept the music teaching job in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil or the
one in Dusseldorf, Germany. It seemed a tossup. So she chose Germany
because of her German ancestry. God used her there for years in a fully
self-supporting position.
14. Then confidently,
joyfully, begin to implement the decision. Step out in faith, asking God
to stop you if you have misunderstood. Watch for further confirmation.
15. Do not give up at the
first few obstacles. God may be only testing your resolve. Seek more
information and counsel. Be open to the possibility that your
destination, ministry or timing may be wrong. How God resolves the
problems can give great assurance later.
The administrator from
Peru who was to bring my contract to San Francisco never appeared. I was
already packed. Besides, friends had already given me two farewell
parties and I felt a bit obligated to go! I had to ask myself if I was
now as willing to remain home, if that was God's will, as I was to go.
Then a cable arrived, instructing me to come at once. The administrator
had been replaced by a new one. God never let's us down.
16. Watch for prayer
impressions. Do they confirm your decision or cause discomfort? You
should not take discomfort lightly. But you should ex pect some
apprehension. Before I went to Peru, friends said I had to have complete
peace or it could not be God's will. But my emotions ranged from mildly
anxious to scared stiff! Then veteran missionary David Adeney said to
me, "Only people who don't think are not afraid to take such a big
step!" He questioned me and said he believed God was guiding me to go.
II. Guidance to serve
abroad
1. Ask the following
questions about yourself. 1) What academic training did God lead you to
take? He often, but not always, leads us in a straight line. He may want
you to serve in your chosen vocation, but be open to other options.
Fifty percent of college graduates never serve in the vocation for which
they prepared. But there is much overlap–concepts that are transferable
to other fields. History major Jim became a basketball coach. Chemist
Paul became a magazine editor. Famous Dr. Martyn Lloyd Jones gave up
medicine in order to preach.
2) What are your spiritual
gifts? In what ways has God already been using you? Ask if you are ready
to serve him abroad. Not every soldier needs officer training, but all
must know spiritual warfare, effective evangelism and Bible study. God
sends no finished products because he has none. He keeps working on us
as we serve him abroad. But a certain amount of prior preparation is
important.
3) Has God directed your
attention to any country of people group? My friend loved everything
Japanese from childhood so it was no surprise that God led her to Japan.
You may wonder if your interest in Jordan is from God. Then a Jordanian
family moves next door and a missionary from Jordan speaks at your
church. You are given a book on Jordan. You see three newspaper articles
on this country. God is leading you to pray for Jordan, and maybe to go.
If you then find a job opening there, it may be his leading.
God used my high school
Spanish class to interest me in Peru–then a restricted, unevangelized
country. My interest deepened in a Latin America prayer group at Biola.
Then I took Wycliffe's summer linguistics course at the University of
Oklahoma. But illness ended my hope of doing Bible translation in Peru.
Even after a long, slow
recovery, no mission agency would have sent me out to the jungle. So I
went to Chico State for a degree in education that would enable me to
earn a living. I discovered that the campus was a "mission field."
Friends and I started the first ICVF group there. Then I taught in a
public school in the Bay Area, where two IVCF alums and I began a
teachers' Christian fellowship which spread all over the region.
Then, in a period of a few
weeks, God changed my outlook on going abroad. Navigators asked me to
pray about doing a year's follow-up with young working women after the
first Billy Graham Crusade in England. Surely I could tolerate life in
London as easily as in California!
Then I helped organize a
farewell for a friend going to Argentina, and discovered that most of
the world's cities are in moderate climate zones! What a wonderful
surprise! I realized with a thrill that I could probably work in cities
almost anywhere!
Then I met Don and Nadine
Burns, Wycliffe missionaries on leave from Peru. They had begun to pray
that I would come teach in the international school in Lima. I had not
known there was such a school! (This was still a decade before the
global job market began to mushroom.) I applied for a position.
But I couldn't get a
passport. To do so I had to go to San Francisco in person during work
hours and I had no car. But during my school district's annual teachers'
workshops in Oakland, a woman I hardly knew asked casually if I would
mind going with her between meetings to San Francisco! To the exact
address I needed! I obtained the passport. Then God pulled strings at
the Peruvian end, and I was hired.
The cumulative effect of
many small answers to prayer and the solution of many small problems
gave me a conviction about God's will that I might not have developed
otherwise.
2. Learn all you can about
God's work in the world. Use Operation World by Patrick Johnstone, to
pray around the world each year. See how relatively evangelized
countries are. Need is not the only consideration, but it does matter.
Why go to Chile where one in three people is an evangelical, when many
other countries do not have a single church?
This book is full of
surprises. The southern European countries have a smaller percentage of
believers than India or China! About 80% of the world's people live in
countries that are off-limits to missionaries and can be entered only by
tentmakers. Japan is open, but is less than one percent evangelical. A
diagram of the 1040 window shows where most of the unreached peoples
are–Muslims, Hindus, Buddhists, Animists. Learn a little about every
country and a lot about two or three.
List questions to
research. You may want to keep a notebook. If you are considering
Turkey, find out about its culture, its cities, its spiritual need, the
status of Christianity and Islam. You will learn that Turkey does not
issue missionary visas. Learn about some of the tentmakers there.
Imagine yourself going and seek answers to questions like the following:
What job openings could you fill? What ministries could you do? Where
might you live? Are there schools for your children? What is the cost of
living? The cost of travel? Would you rent out your present home? GO can
help you think through many of these questions.
3. Learn about mission
agencies. Which ones work in needy countries that interest you–maybe
Mozambique, Egypt or Thailand? Which agencies seek people with skills
you have, like medicine or teaching or aviation? Find out more about
what these agencies do. Read their publications. Ask what options they
might have for you.
4. Learn about tentmaking
jobs. What kinds of jobs are available in your target region that you
could fill? Do you need further training? GO's job-matching service can
provide you with job information. If God has not given you a burden for
any particular country, he may use a job opening to direct you to where
you should serve.
5. Consult with
missionaries or tentmakers from your target country. They can give
firsthand information. GO may be able to put you in touch with helpful
people who are home on leave.
6. Do vacation service
there. You might tutor English for a few weeks in Greece or Mongolia or
Cambodia, or work along with missionaries in Italy or Taiwan. A short
visit can give an idea of what life there will be like. (Find out about
cheap flights.)
7. Define your purpose and
devise a plan. Some missions courses require students to design a plan
for reaching a particular people group. This helpful exercise makes them
think through details and biblical principles. But you do not know what
you will find. Do not let a fixed plan keep you from noticing all the
surprises God will have for you! Be sensitive to the people and the
situation around you.
As I started university
student fellowships in about 50 cities in Peru, Brazil, Spain and
Portugal, each situation was different. No one recipe was applicable to
two cities! God wanted me to depend on him and not on already formulated
plans. But it was important that I had firmly in mind the basic
principles of a genuine student movement and the fundamentals of good
Bible study, evangelism and leadership training.
8. Begin with a short
term. You need only commit yourself and your family for an initial year
or two, depending on your contract. This is easier than making a
lifetime commitment to a country. Extend that commitment later as God
directs. When I first went to Peru, I derived comfort from the knowledge
that I could come home after a year if the situation proved too arduous.
But the Lord gave such confirmation of his will, that even after 21
years in several countries I was reluctant to move home!
It is during an initial
short term that tentmakers often make long-term commitments to their
region–as long as God keeps opening up jobs.
A mission agency may
require a longer initial commitment because you raise donor support, and
they expect you to serve a number of years after costly language and
culture training. But many agencies also have initial one to three year
programs.
Many tentmakers serve only
two or three years, but others join a mission agency after learning the
language and culture at their own expense. The mission gains trained,
tried and proven workers who can greatly cut down the costly attrition
rate of regular missionaries, 30% of whom quit during or after their
first term abroad.
8. Remember that God often
leads through intermediate steps. A Christian couple burdened for the
Baluch people could not get permission to live in Baluchistan, but God
led them to an Arab country where thousands of Baluch are guest workers!
Both husband and wife earned well and lived comfortably. He translated
the New Testament for five million Baluch people who had never had the
Scriptures before! A few years later these tentmakers were able to live
for a time in the Baluch homeland in Pakistan.
Another couple worked with
a few Kazakhs in Muslim western China. They could not have foreseen that
the USSR would suddenly crumble and that they would be able to move
across the border into Kazakhstan! By then they knew the language and
culture and had prepared Bible materials.
If you hope to work in a
rural or tribal area, it may make sense to work first in a larger city
of your new host country, to become familiar with its dominant culture
before learning one of its subcultures. You may also find families from
your people group living in the city. Win them, and then help them win
their own people! It is what Paul did.
9. Share your plans with
humility. Ronald said, "First God told me to go to Japan, then China,
and now he is telling me to go to Africa." It would be difficult to
trust such a capricious God! Until we have arrived in our new host
country it is better to say, "We believe God is leading us to Morocco.
We are awaiting his further confirmation."
III. Special
considerations
1. Family. God always
takes into account the whole family. All of the above assumes that both
husband and wife are equally committed to serving abroad. But often they
are not. The eager spouse must be very patient with the more reluctant
one and try to allay his or her fears with facts.
Contact GO for cultural
data. Talk with people who have lived in your target country. Make a
short visit. A couple must not move abroad unless both are convinced it
is God's will.
God always considers the
children. He loves them more than their parents do! Some jobs abroad are
only for single men or single women, but most may also be family status.
Children are no problem, but employers may turn down a family with too
many. Salary and housing may range from modest but adequate to
luxurious. In some countries it is still possible to have a live-in maid
or a once-a-week cleaning woman.
Many large cities have
excellent international or bilingual schools–and even a Christian
school. Or several parents may pool their time and skills and do
homeschooling. Children who grow up in another culture gain an enriched
upbringing. Small children often adjust more easily and learn the
language more quickly than their parents.
But it is more difficult
to move teenagers abroad because of their more complicated relational
and educational needs. The Andersons took their two teenage sons to
Sudan, because both were eager to go, even though the high school senior
had to take a correspondence course. A family vacation in the target
country may change the reluctance of teenagers, but if they remain
unwilling, the parents may have to wait a few years until they are
grown.
Another consideration is
elderly parents. If you have siblings who can care for them, you may
feel free to leave. But many missionaries remain home for a short period
to care for an elderly parent. One couple took their 90 year old mother
to live with them to Thailand!
2. Health. Most mission
agencies require missionaries and their families to have excellent
health, because it is costly for the mission to move them home again
after its costly investment in their travel, language and culture
training. Secular employers have the same concern for their families.
But the 1990s are not the
1890s nor even the 1950s! Today most of the world's larger cities have
qualified doctors and hospitals, and medications are readily available.
In case of an emergency, jet travel can get one home in a hurry. If you
do effective work in your home country, without many absences, you can
probably do so in most major cities, but perhaps not in rustic rural or
tribal areas. But if a family member needs constant medical attention,
it is probably a sign God does not want you abroad at present.
We should now consider
several guidance practices which are not helpful.
IV. Practices to avoid
1. Do not wait for a
missionary call. The confusing idea of waiting for a call has probably
kept more people home from the mission field than any other factor. The
call is already given to everyone in the Great Commission. (Mt. 28:1820)
The Lord's call to us is never to a piece of geography or to a certain
ministry. He called the Twelve to be with himself, to learn from him,
and to be sent out by him–wherever he wanted them to go. And to come
home and to go out again–wherever he sent them. (Mk.3:1315)
The prophet Isaiah had a
wonderful vision of God's glory. Afterward, he was so close to God that
he overheard the following words: "Whom shall we send? Who will go for
us?" Without hesitation, he answered, "Here am I, Lord. Send me."
(Isaiah 6)
The call is to the Lord.
The questions of where and how to promote the worldwide mission of the
church is a matter of direction. You know that your present assignment
is at home, as a witness to local compatriots and to internationals, and
as a praying and giving sender of missionaries–until God leads you
abroad. If you can witness to friends and associates at home, you are a
likely candidate for overseas. Praying and giving shows your concern for
this world.
A mission agency brochure
cover says: "What if I have not been called?" You turn the page and
read,"Go anyway." No supernatural dream or vision is needed. The desire
is reason enough to investigate your options.
But many mission leaders
use the word call to describe a strong conviction from God that helps
you to go with confidence and keeps you steady when circumstances become
difficult. This conviction is important, but rarely comes while we sit
and wait for it. It develops through the process of gathering and
evaluating data. You fly off by faith, unable to see the future.
Guidance that still seems foggy from your homeland may seem crystal
clear when you look back from your new host country. You wonder how you
missed the cumulative impact of many answers to prayer.
2. Do not "put out a
fleece." That is what Gideon did, but he had neither the Bible nor the
Holy Spirit. He put out two sheepskins and asked God to do a miracle. We
must not try to force God to answer in any particular way at any
particular time. It is better to await God's answer in his own time. A
delay may mean he is changing us, or is juggling people and
circumstances in our target location. We must wait patiently–but not
passively–for his timing and confirmation.
3. Do not cast lots or
draw straws. The Eleven sought to replace Judas this way (Acts 1). But
there is no instance of believers doing this again after the Holy Spirit
came at Pentecost.
4. Do not play roulette
with the Scriptures. You have heard the tale of the man who supposedly
opened the Bible at random and found his finger on the sentence, "And
Judas went out and hanged himself." Rejecting that guidance, he closed
his eyes and pounced on the words, "Go thou and do likewise." His third
random try? "And what thou doest, do quickly." God may sometimes lead a
new Christian by this "blink-and-jab" method, but he expects more from
us.
5. Beware of anyone with
his own hotline to heaven. Some people claim to receive detailed orders
from God. They disrupt fellowship because they consider anyone who
questions their guidance unspiritual. When their guidance later proves
false they make excuses. Not even Paul had that kind of guidance!
Nor did Abraham. He knew
only that he was to go to Canaan. Genesis shows how he searched for the
right location, near a busy trade route. He was a self-employed
"tentmaker"–in agribusiness. But his motivation was missions–to be God's
channel of blessing to the tribal nations around him. Wherever he built
an altar he was staking a claim for God. He interceded for Sodom and
acted justly in the war of the kings. He was faithful wherever God led
him.
6. Do not bypass your
mind. Hotline Christians often depend more on their intuition or prayer
impressions. But no passage of Scripture encourages us to do this.
Usually God reaches our emotions through our minds. That he tells us to
seek his wisdom suggests he speaks to our minds. (Jas. 1:5)
Recall the verse,"Trust in
the Lord with all your heart and do not rely on your own understanding."
(Prov. 3: 5) The last part refers to unaided human thinking–without
prayer. Verse 6 continues: "In all your ways acknowledge him and he will
direct your paths. Do not be wise in your own eyes." Use biblical
principles, not worldly ones.
John Stott, in his little
booklet Your Mind Matters, says some Christians think feelings and
intuition are more spiritually dependable than their minds. But it is
easier for Satan to deceive us at the intuitional level than at the
rational level. Our minds respond more readily to reality checks. Total
depravity does not mean that we are totally bad, but that every faculty
of our inner being has been tainted with sin, including our imagination
and intuition. But Paul says the renewal of our minds is part of our
regeneration.
Stott says our minds are
God's gifts, and we must not put experience above doctrine nor emotion
above intelligence. Faith and guidance are not irrational. "Commitment
without reflection is fanaticism in action. But reflection without
commitment is the paralysis of action."
God abases human pride and
human philosophies but not the human minds he made. God does not want
mindless, repetitious worship that puts us into a trance (Mt. 6:7), but
a warm devotion set on fire by truth–a devotion that has biblical
content and balance and avoids fanatical extremes.
Paul says, "But we have
the mind of Christ." (1 Cor.2:16) Stott says this is a mind which can
judge matters rightly because it is informed by Christ's teaching, his
principles and his will. Our minds, trained in Christ, become like his
mind, so that we share his goals and his purposes.
In relation to guidance,
God says, "Be not like a horse or mule, without understanding, which
must be curbed with bit or bridle." (Psa.32:8,9) The mind matters.
He says,"Come and let us
reason together. . ." (Isa.1:18) Analyze, think through, present
arguments. Paul said to the Corinthians,"Why not judge for yourselves
what is right?" (1 Cor.6) He is saying,"Why don't you use your brains?
Why don't you use the same common sense in the moral and spiritual realm
that you use in the physical realm?" (Stott)
Packer lists the main
pitfalls in guidance. People are: 1) Unwilling to think, because of a
false piety, an unhealthy supernaturalism. 2) Unwilling to think ahead
and weigh long-term consequences or alternative options. 3) Unwilling to
take advice. 4) Unwilling to suspect their motivation. "Search me, O
God, and know my heart!" (Psalm 139:23,24). 5) Unwilling to discount
someone's personal magnetism. Is someone putting pressure on you? 6)
Unwilling to await God's timing.
V. While awaiting
guidance
1. Sharpen your ministry
skills. Gain expertise in your workplace evangelism and inductive Bible
study preparation, your group Bible study leadership skills and your
investigative Bible studies with seekers. Can you turn an inductive
Bible study into an inductive sermon? Can you disciple a new believer?
Can you help with a church planting project somewhere nearby?
2. Get further training.
Do you need a correspondence course on Bible knowledge? Should you read
a book or two on apologetics? Everyone should take the Perspectives
missions course, if at all possible, or thoroughly study the textbook.
The course is now offered all over the U.S. at hours convenient for
working people.
Would an extra academic
course or two enhance your marketability? Or a certain kind of work
experience? An engineering firm customized training in computer-aided
design for Frank before he left for Asia. If you hope to teach English,
crash courses are given in many learning institutions. ESL teachers'
manuals and student workbooks can be found in libraries. Can you find a
foreigner to tutor? (Women who do not want a full-time job, can tutor
English in their homes, and evangelize their students.)
3. Befriend internationals
from your target country. Are any among your neighbors or on a nearby
university campus? Learn about their culture and religion, as you
tactfully evangelize them. But do not reveal your missionary plans.
While studying engineering
in the University of Nebraska in the 1950s, Bob Rutz befriended a dozen
Iranian students, including his roommate. He did not know God would lead
him to Iran. On arrival in Teheran, their upper class families extended
generous hospitality to this young man who had helped their sons. When
the sons returned home they were all given top government positions and
were valuable contacts and partners as Bob set up several businesses,
including a restaurant and miniature golf.
VI. If you mistake
God's will
If things go wrong in your
new host country, it does not mean you have misunderstood God's will.
The Twelve twice endured fierce storms on Galilee because they obeyed
Jesus. Paul was personally commissioned by the risen Christ. Yet look
how he suffered to do God's will! People who stay home also suffer. We
are all damaged goods in a spoiled, enemy-occupied world. God graciously
allows problems to help us grow, and to show the presence of Jesus
Christ more clearly through us.
But what if you become
convinced in Bahrain that you have mistaken God's will? It's not the end
of the world! Do you think God would punish you for trying to serve him
abroad when most Christians do not even care? He is probably pleased and
will give you some ministry there until the right time for a new
assignment at home or in another country. He allows us to make midcourse
corrections!
Remember how graciously he
dealt with Jonah? And he did not mistake God's will–he rejected it. God
used even the forces of nature to rescue him and give him a second
chance, because he understood the conflict in Jonah. None of us deserve
to used by God. Our ministry is by grace just like our salvation. Packer
says God not only restores us, but he even takes our mistakes and
follies into his plan for us and brings good out of them! (Rom. 8:28)
Note God's words to Israel, which had suffered a great locust invasion
for its disobedience: "I will restore to you the years which the
swarming locust has eaten. . . You shall eat in plenty and be satisfied,
and praise the name of the LORD your God, who has dealt wondrously with
you" (Joel 2:254, 26).
VII. What if no door
opens?
1. What if all your
prayers and efforts fail to get you overseas? You tried everything.
Months have passed but no doors opened. You need not be embarrassed. You
only expressed willingness to go if God so led.
He may delay you while he
works out many details. He detained me for six years through illness so
I would gain three kinds of training I did not know I would need: 1) A
degree in education and English–marketable skills for tentmaking. 2)
Experience in how to start university student fellowships. 3) Experience
in how to evangelize in secular schools! He knew what I did not–that he
was going to take me to the country he had placed on my heart, but not
as a regular missionary. He would send me as a fully self-supporting
tentmaker, so I would need both the academic training and appropriate
ministry skills.
This was in the early
50's–about the same time that Christy Wilson and a few others went into
Afghanistan as tentmakers–at least a decade before the post-World War II
global job market developed. None of us knew much about tentmaking. No
one could have told me how to prepare for tentmaking, or how to do it,
but see how wonderfully God led me, even when I did not understand what
he was doing! You can trust him!
But if your door does not
open (as mine did not for for six years), you will know by the process
of elimination that for the present God has assigned you to two
responsibilities: 1) To evangelize your compatriots and the
internationals in your community. You can know this is God's will until
he opens another door. 2) To be a sender–to pray and give faithfully to
others who are able to go.
When God calls you to this
double ministry at home, it is as important as any assignment he will
ever give you. Genuinely trying to go abroad is a good way to be sure
you are assigned at home. At least for the time being.
But check out overseas
options from to time, since God may want to change your assignment. A
sender is just as important as a goer, but it is not up to us to choose
which we prefer to be.
Conclusion
God says, "I know the
plans that I have for you, plans for welfare and not for evil, to give
you a future and a hope." (Jer.29:11) "We know that in everything God
works for good for those who love him, for those who are called
according to his purpose." (Rom. 8:28). One day we will say with godly
old Caleb,"You know in your hearts and souls, all of you, that not one
thing has failed of all the good things which the Lord God promised
concerning you; all have come to pass for you; not one of them has
failed." (Joshua 23:14).
So we walk by faith. In
this dark world God always reveals enough light for us to take the next
step, but not enough so that we can run ahead of him. The process of
seeking his will helps us know him better. He cares more about where and
how we serve than we do. He cares more about us than any ministry we may
render. He never really sends us abroad, but takes us by the hand and
leads us, always present to guide, encourage, protect and help.
– Ruth E. Siemens
Bibliography:
Oliver Barclay. Guidance,
Downers Grove, IL: IVP.
Martin and Elizabeth
Goldsmith. Finding your Way: Guidance and the Will of God. Downers
Grove, IL: IVP.
Paul Little. Confirming
God's Will. Downers Grove, IL: IVP. 36pp.
J. I. Packer (1985).
Finding God's Will, Downers Grove: IVP, 32 pp.
M. Blaine Smith. Knowing
God's Will. Downers Grove, IL: IVP.
John R. W. Stott. Your
Mind Matters. Downers Grove: IVP.
Copyright 1996 Ruth E. Siemens
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