So now we head into part three on this series on time. For the sake of brevity, I will simply state here that if you haven't read the first two posts (parts 1 and 2) than it would make much more sense for you to go back and read those than it would to start here. If, however, you feel like you must start with part 3, then that of course is your prerogative. The series has been based on a passage written by Paul to the church in Ephesus. I will post the verses down below, but the reference is Eph 5:14-17. Part one was looking deeply at verse 14, and how we need to wake up from our spiritual slumber of sin and death and set our gaze on the eternal purpose of God and His glory. Part two was based on verses 15 and 16, and talked about how we need to make sure that we understand that we will give an account for our time and that Christ did not redeem it for us to continue in sin but so that we would fulfill our eternal purpose of glorifying the God of creation. Now in part three I want to go into how one does this. Let's start by looking at the passage we've been going through.
Therefore He says, "Awake you who sleep, Arise from the dead, And Christ will give you light." See then that you walk circumspectly, not as fools but as wise, redeeming the time, because the days are evil. Therefore do not be unwise, but understand what the will of the Lord is.
Eph 5:14-17
The bold section is verse 17, and it is what we will be looking at today. The thing is, when we look at the rest of the verse, when we understand that our "life is at best a vapor (Psalm 39:5)," when we fully comprehend that "we must all appear before the judgment seat of Christ (2nd Cor 5:10)," then when we finally get to verse 17 we must be so desperate to avoid wasting our life and of not having the fullness of God's glory in our lives that we are crying out for the answer. And when we read "do not be unwise, but understand what the will of the Lord is" there has to be an urgency that rises up within us to UNDERSTAND WHAT THE WILL OF THE LORD IS. This is the key to everything, this is the cornerstone of a life that isn't wasted and this is the crux of living a life that is complete in the fullness of God. It is at this place that we must give our entire being to discerning the will of the Lord. But this is also where many people give up. "I can't possibly know what the will of the Lord is, His ways are so much higher than my ways and His thoughts are so far above my thoughts and there is no way that I can know what the will of the Lord is." How many times has this crossed my mind and how many times have I heard this from other people? I'm here to tell you right here and now that this is a lie from the pit of hell and I am not about to tolerate it anymore.
Before you can understand what the will of the Lord is, you have to have some understanding of who you are and what you have. If you have salvation, if you have committed your life to Christ, receiving eternal life through His death on the cross, than you also have something that is way more incredible than eternal life or forgiveness of sins: He has given you the Holy Spirit, the third part of the Trinitarian God, to become one with your spirit and to live inside you and with you forever. 1st Timothy 1:7 states "For God has not given you a spirit of fear, but of power and of love and of a strong mind." Romans 8:15-17 states "For you did not receive the spirit of bondage again to fear, but you received the Spirit of adoption by whom we cry out 'Abba, Father.' The Spirit Himself bears witness with our spirit that we are children of God, and if children, then heirs-heirs of God and joint heirs with Christ, if indeed we suffer with Him, that we may also be glorified together." It is very clear that God did not set aside His elect just to have them around, He established within them a Spirit of "power and of love and of a strong mind," not so that we can continue in our own way and go unnoticed but to proclaim to the world the glory of the One who has made His dwelling within us. And by Paul's words to the Romans, we not only have God living within us, but we have been adopted by God and are joint heirs with Christ. This is who we are, so if Paul, divinely inspired, pens that we are joint heirs with Christ, how can we possibly believe even for a second that He would not reveal His will to us?
Now that it has been established that God can and does reveal His will to us, we must put seeking His will in it's proper place. I am about to describe the one time management technique that I will use during this entire series, but it provides a helpful picture for us to use. What we have here to the left is what I call (because I'm not sure what it's really called) the important/urgent grid. The idea is that everything that we do fits into one of these boxes, with some things being urgent, somethings being important, some being both and some being neither. The obvious conclusion is that we need to focus our attention on the things in box 1 first, and set up our priorities from there, making sure that we do the things in box 2, quickly finish or delegate box 3, and spend the least amount in box 4 (box 4 includes video games and movies and things like that which are not necessarily to be avoided all together, but need to stay in their proper place). The reason I bring this up is that when generally when I hear this analogy, we see that reading our bibles, prayer and things of this nature are considered important, but are not necessarily urgent and are placed in box 2, the "secondary tier" of the importance hierarchy. In light of what we have discussed up to this point, the only obvious conclusion is that this is as much of a lie as us not being able to hear God's will. Our vapor of a life lacks any eternal (and therefore any real) significance outside of us living out the will of God, and that not only makes it important but extremely urgent. Our time must be centered around the will of God: seeking it, understanding it, and living it out by the Spirit of "power and of love and of a sound mind" that God has given us.
The only real way that I know of for understanding the will of the Lord is through prayer: through the written word (the bible), through our supplications and spoken prayers, and through sitting in silence before the Lord in complete surrender. I refer to all three of these things as prayer because to me all three are important aspects of the process, with us actually speaking being probably the lowest point of them all. In fact, if I were to order their importance, I would say that sitting in silence is the most important, reading the word as slightly less important, and actually presenting our requests as the least important. When we place ourselves in a position of silence before the Lord, what we are doing is humbling ourselves, giving up our oh-so-precious time and setting ourselves up to be able to hear from the Lord. And don't let anyone fool you, developing this habit is hard work. It isn't good enough simply to sit down and not do any physical activity for 15 minutes, we must set our full gaze and attention on the one true Creator of the universe, not presenting our requests but simply sitting in awe of His wonder and His majesty. To do this without letting thoughts of what we need to do that day or of who we need to talk to or the last movie we watched. or anything else other than God in is very difficult and is a skill that takes practice and attention to actually accomplish. Honestly, I think I don't really sit in this state longer than a minute straight before my mind wanders, so it is a skill that I don't really have yet, but it is one that I am striving for.However, when we practice this habit, when we develop this spiritual discipline, we are then able to get the most out of the other two aspects of prayer I mentioned. Our bible reading becomes more fruitful and we understand more of it because we are seeing the things that God is showing us more clearly. Our spoken prayers become more and more productive because we are no longer praying from our own selves but we are praying the prayers that the Father has placed on our heart because they are on His heart. Because I don't want to be accused of anything, I want to state right now that we should not stop reading our bibles and giving our requests to God to solely sit in silence before God, there has to be balance. I want to place the importance on it because I feel that it is one of the more neglected of the spiritual disciplines and is probably the most counter-cultural of them all. One quick example of sitting before the Lord is in the verse that appears at the top of my blog. Habakkuk 2:1 states "I will stand my watch and set myself on the rampart, and watch to see what He will say to me, and what I will answer when I am corrected." The prophet is not only setting himself on the rampart and standing his watch to see what the Lord will say to him, he is also waiting for God to give him the proper response when He does respond and corrects him. That is a profound thought, and I look forward to the day when that is how I respond to Him and His will.
Of course, now that we are fairly well versed in the fact that we can hear His will, and how we can do so, there is another part to obedience that we must consider: doing His will. I can tell you of several incidents in my own life where I clearly heard from the Lord and then because I did not like what He said I convinced myself and others that I hadn't actually heard from Him and that I was still waiting for an answer. When we think we have heard the will of the Lord, we must act in confidence within that will. Pretending like I didn't hear it never made it go away, it just made it harder when I actually responded to it. At the end of Matthew chapter 4, shortly after Jesus' experience in the desert being tempted by Satan, is a very enlightening passage of how He called four of His disciples. He called out to them while they were fishing (that was their profession) and they
immediately stopped what they were doing and followed Him. The underlined word is the one that caught my attention when I read through this passage the last time. Two sets of brothers immediately left their vocation, their friends, their jobs, and even their fathers, and followed the Lord at the drop of a single word: come. No one asked where they were going, they didn't go tell their bosses that they were leaving, they didn't waste time explaining to their father why they had to go, they
immediately left what they were doing and followed Him. This is what we need to do, we need to have this mentality in our own walk with God. We must seek out His will with the intention of following Him, whatever the cost and personal "sacrifice" that we have to make, because we have to know and understand that His will is what is best for our lives and will bring us more gain than we could ever hope to achieve any other way. If we will immediately and decisively place ourselves in His will, than we will be used for great kingdom exploits because we have submitted ourselves to the Holy Spirit and are seeking to give God glory in everything that we do.
So some practical applications to end with. 1) We must form our time around God and not the other way around. Our time belongs to God, and we must acknowledge that fact. We shouldn't make time for Him, He must be the source from which all of our time is based. 2) Don't wait to respond to His word. We must act on His will when He reveals it to us. There should be no hesitation, we must allow Him to lead us, especially when we know that we don't have the strength for it. It is only then that He can show us the true strength and power that only He can portray. 3) We must build our time around God. I know this is the same as the first one, but it is the most important, and needs to be stated over and over and repeated to us everyday so that we don't forget it. One suggestion I made to the college students I spoke to (and one that I picked up from Corey Russell in one of his talks) was that they should try going to bed at 10pm and getting up at 5:30 or 6am. This would take our sleep schedules and place them in full submission to God, since this is completely against the culture of the collegiate world. The grand majority of the sins that I have struggled with only manifest themselves after 10pm, so to go to sleep before that not only removes the temptation from my life it also establishes that I am setting my sleep schedule for God, not for my own selfish purposes. The same goes for getting up at 6am. I don't just do this on a natural basis, I have to get up that early for a specific purpose, and I am not going to get up and just not fulfill that purpose. I don't get up at 6 and then decide that I don't feel like doing whatever it is I got up for and decide to waste time with tv or video games, I set out to fulfill that purpose because I got out of bed precisely to do so. And if we set that purpose as spending time with the Lord, that makes it that much more of a desirable habit. For anyone attempting to try this (mostly talking to college students at the moment, I imagine) I have one tip for you: the trick is going to bed at 10pm. If you can do that, the 6am part becomes so much easier. It's a thought that deserves a lot of consideration. The last application I have is 4) to remove any excuses or idols that you have set up to stop yourself from living the life of eternal significance that God has planned for you. One excuse that I hear over and over that I want to address is the statement that "I'm not sure that what I heard was from the Lord, so I'm going to wait for confirmation." Although this isn't a bad thing, we can use it to paralyze our efforts and our effectiveness in the kingdom. When we say "I'm waiting for confirmation," I've noticed that most of the time we really mean that we want to see writing in the sky while Gabriel proclaims it to us and Moses, raised from the dead, carves the same message into stone tablets, and even then this isn't enough to prove to us "beyond all doubt" that we have heard what He has spoken. I want to present to you the example of Saul, who becomes Paul. Saul went zealously after what he felt was the will of God, but in his instance it just happened to be persecuting Christians. He believed it was from the Lord, so he pursued it with passion and violence. I believe the reason God was able to use Paul in such an effective and powerful way is that he was already pursuing God with all of himself, and when God encountered him on the road to Damascus the only thing that changed was the path he was following. You may very likely be wrong when you begin to pursue God, you may hear incorrectly and you may be doing some very destructive things, but God will correct you; it is the passion that He is seeking for, not perfect knowledge. If what you feel like the Lord has told you directly contradicts scripture, then it obviously isn't His will and you need to ignore it, but you can't hold yourself back simply because you are "unsure" what His will is. Call fear what it is, repent from it, and boldly act out of what you know to be the will of the Father.
This concludes this little series on time. Much of what I've written here is similar to what I said at CV on Jan 18th, and some of it is different. I also wanted to give you access to the
powerpoint and the
outline of my talk, so simply click on those links and it should take you to them. I am always excited for comments or questions or anything, so please feel free either to contact me or to leave comments on this post. Also I want to thank you for reading this, hopefully it has been helpful and insightful for you as you continue your walk with God. I pray that we would all gain greater understanding in how to discern the will of God, greater passion and urgency to do so, and greater boldness to act out in faith because of what Jesus has done for us. Amen. God Bless.