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  • Five Steps to Making Godly Decisions

    Five Steps to Making Godly Decisions

    REMOVED SATANIC LINK

    Every Christian wants to know God's will. Especially when we're facing big decisions. We'd like to know which college he wants us to attend, which career he wants us to pursue, which spouse he wants us to marry, which house he wants us to buy.
    And so sometimes we get a little wacky trying to figure out what God's will is. I know people who come up with ridiculous games they want God to play. They'll pray, "If you want me to take this job, then please make the phone ring right now. ... Ohhkaayyy .... right now?" I know one guy whose parents try to find God's will by closing their eyes, flipping the Bible open to a random page, pointing their finger down on a random verse, and doing whatever that verse says. It's a good thing they've never hit Matthew 27:5, "And Judas went and hanged himself."
    Why do we do all these spiritual gymnastics, when God has promised that he'll tell us everything we need to know? That's what James said in his letter to people who had experienced persecution as Christians from their families, neighbors, employers, and authorities, but weren't sure how God wanted them to respond. James gave them this encouragement:
    Count it all joy, my brothers, when you meet trials of various kinds, for you know that the testing of your faith produces steadfastness. And let steadfastness have its full effect, that you may be perfect and complete, lacking in nothing. If any of you lacks wisdom, let him ask God, who gives generously to all without reproach, and it will be given him. (James 1:2-5)
    In James' letter, there are five simple steps we can take to receive God's guidance and make godly decisions. Here's the first:
    1. Ask for God's wisdom.
    In the words James uses, it’s clear that he isn’t talking about some wispy, theoretical wisdom. He’s talking about the kind of wisdom that guides you in your everyday life. The kind of wisdom that dictates how you’ll reflect Christ in the hectic stress of the office, or in the chaotic mess of a house with young kids. It determines how you respond to your precious child after he throws his bottle on the floor for the 10th time. It controls what you’ll do when you’re flipping through TV channels, and a show catches your eye that will be destructive to your soul.
    James is more interested in this everyday wisdom because he realizes that the big decisions we make in life are crucially affected by the little choices we make every day. God promises to give you his wisdom when you ask for it. But there’s a condition:

    Let him ask in faith, with no doubting, for the one who doubts is like a wave of the sea that is driven and tossed by the wind. (James 1:6)
    He’s talking about someone who asks for God’s wisdom, but then doesn’t follow it once they get it! So the next step in gaining God’s guidance is:
    2. Commit to follow God’s wisdom when you get it.
    If you ask for God’s wisdom, then ignore it and do you own thing when he answers, James says you’re like a wave tossed in the ocean. I know what this feels like. On the windward side of Oahu, there's a tiny island with on the back side. This cove has steep cliffs on all sides and a steep protrusion of rock in the middle. There are waves coming in from all directions, and waves bouncing off the cliffs in every direction.
    It’s fun to jump off the cliff into that cove, but when you land in the water it’s extremely difficult to swim out. You may start going in one direction, but then five seconds later you’re going in the opposite direction. There are sharp rocks all around you, and sometimes there are sharks hanging out on the bottom, looking for an afternoon snack.
    It’s a dangerous place to be! And James says if you’re going back and forth like that, asking for God’s help and then rejecting it when he gives it to you, you’d be better off just not asking. So follow his guidance when he gives it in the little decisions you make every day.
    James has some advice for the big decisions too. He gives an example of businessmen planning a trip. This was just as common in his day as it is in ours. Through James, we’re listening in on their conversation:
    You who say, “Today or tomorrow we will go into such and such a town and spend a year there and trade and make a profit”— yet you do not know what tomorrow will bring. What is your life? For you are a mist that appears for a little time and then vanishes. (James 4:13-14)
    Is James condemning their plans? No, not exactly. Is he saying it’s useless to prepare for the future? No, not really.
    He’s not criticizing the act of making plans, he’s telling us to make our plans with humility. That’s the next principle of receiving God’s guidance:
    3. Make plans with humility
    We’re free to set 5-year plans or 30-year plans, as long as we’re following James’ first bit of advice, and truly relying on the wisdom of the Holy Spirit as we do so.

    James isn’t rebuking these businessmen for their actions as much as their attitudes. He’s condemning their arrogance and their self-confident planning that doesn’t recognize God or his sovereignty. “What is your life?” James says, “You are a mist!”
    When I first bought a house, we started getting all kinds of phone calls from loan companies and insurance salesmen. One guy was trying as hard as he could to sell me life-insurance.
    He had all the right things to say: “Do you really want your wife to be paying a huge mortgage all by herself, Mr. Dirks? How will she survive?” I told him I would talk to my wife and if we were interested, I would call him back the next day.
    “That’s fine, Mr. Dirks,” he said, “You go ahead and call me back tomorrow. … If you wake up.” …Click.
    I don’t think the guy had ever read James 4, but he was absolutely right. We can make all the plans we want, but we need to make them with a big “IF.”
    That’s exactly what James says in the next verse:
    Instead you ought to say, “If the Lord wills, we will live and do this or that.” (James 4:15).
    Is James establishing some kind of ritual incantation that we should recite before every statement we ever make? That’s what my dear grandmother thought. “If it’s the Lord’s will, I’ll make it to Bob’s Big Boy for lunch.” … “If it’s the Lord’s will, I’ll watch Lawrence Welk before I go to bed.”
    It’s not the words so much as the principle behind the words. That is… as you're making your plans with humility, you need to:
    4. Live your life with dependence
    We all make choices in life. What career to pursue, who to marry, where to live, how many kids to have, where to send them to school. James says, “God has given you wisdom, so go ahead and make those plans.
    Just recognize that God’s sovereign will is the final authority, and that any human plan works only “if the Lord wills.”
    I can hear the question in your head: “So what if our godly plans, made with humble dependence on God, fail?” What if you spend four or five years and tens of thousands of dollars pursuing a college degree that you’re never able to use? What if you decide to invest your retirement savings in Palm, and it all vanishes? What if you decide to marry a wonderful Christian woman or man, but the marriage soon falls apart? Does that mean you weren’t following the will of God?
    James answers these questions as he concludes his letter:
    Be patient, therefore, brothers, until the coming of the Lord. See how the farmer waits for the precious fruit of the earth, being patient about it, until it receives the early and the late rains. You also, be patient. Establish your hearts, for the coming of the Lord is at hand. Do not grumble against one another, brothers, so that you may not be judged; behold, the Judge is standing at the door. As an example of suffering and patience, brothers, take the prophets who spoke in the name of the Lord. Behold, we consider those blessed who remained steadfast. You have heard of the steadfastness of Job, and you have seen the purpose of the Lord, how the Lord is compassionate and merciful. (James 5:7-11)
    Here he returns to the issue of suffering, and how it relates to the will of God. When you’ve relied on God’s wisdom, but your plans seem to be failing, then God doesn’t always call you to give up on our plans. He calls us to be like the prophets and…
    5. Endure trying times with patience
    We might not what God’s ultimate plan might be, but we can know his guidance day by day. And, just like Job, that guidance might lead us straight into suffering. But when it does, we know we’re in good company because Jesus is the best example of suffering for God’s greater purpose.
    Following God’s guidance doesn’t mean life will be easier. It almost always means life will get harder. But the promise of Christ is that he will guide us, empower us, and even carry us through those times: “I am with you always, to the end of the age” (Matthew 28:20)

    REMOVED SATANIC LINK

  • #2
    Re: Five Steps to Making Godly Decisions

    @ChinhNguyen Can you type on your own or do you only do copy and paste?

    I Jesus!

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    • #3
      Re: Five Steps to Making Godly Decisions

      Just another gook barging in here without posting a proper introduction.
      The Honorable HTannor (Pro NRA, Anti-Homer Marriage), Judge, Freehold Supreme Court

      "Credo elvem etiam vivere"

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      • #4
        Re: Five Steps to Making Godly Decisions

        I was down at Tractor Supply today, I heard that if you put a million chinks in a room with a million typewriters, they can write that crap. I say they should be making sneakers and stop slacking off. God is watching you know.
        Isaiah 45:7 I form the light, and create darkness: I make peace, and create evil: I the LORD do all these things.
        Amos 3:6 Shall a trumpet be blown in the city, and the people not be afraid? shall there be evil in a city, and the LORD hath not done it?
        Numbers 21:6 And the LORD sent fiery serpents among the people, and they bit the people; and much people of Israel died.
        Matthew 10:34 Think not that I am come to send peace on earth: I came not to send peace, but a sword.
        Matthew 10:35 For I am come to set a man at variance against his father, and the daughter against her mother, and the daughter in law against her mother in law.
        Matthew 10:36 And a man's foes shall be they of his own household.

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        • #5
          Re: Five Steps to Making Godly Decisions

          Originally posted by James Hutchins View Post
          I was down at Tractor Supply today, I heard that if you put a million chinks in a room with a million typewriters, they can write that crap. I say they should be making sneakers and stop slacking off. God is watching you know.


          Outstanding analysis, Brother James.

          When we're talking gooks, don't forget there are a billion of them. So if we take that billion and add a billion typewriters (invented by Remington - of rifle fame - and I bet he regrets that time wasted on typewriters rather than rifles) those slopes are bound to come up with something.

          And here I'm thinking of all those delectable hard working farm girls trying to make it in the big city attempting to [s/hook up[/s] meet nice young city boys, it just brings me to tears.

          Just imagine your son: Here he is working very hard for an insurance company trying to screw making sure honest, clean living farm families have the coverage they need.

          An application lands on his desk from Pa and Ma Jones. He tries to assess the risk not knowing it was typed up by some slant in orientistan. He gives them a quote and they jump on it.

          Six weeks later Pa Jones suffers a hernia while shucking corn and lands in the hospital. The bill is $100,000. Your boy's employer investigates and finds out your son screwed up the underwriting. They refuse the hospital bill and transfer the liability to your son.

          Your son files bankruptcy and comes back home looking for a place to live and work to do.

          You immediately fire seventeen of our messicans to make room for your son.

          There, can you see it? Chinks screw up insurance applications. Your son is fired. You axe a bunch of greasers. Your son is happy, but he can't produce enough tomatoes to cover what they picked.

          And you are forced into insolvency because of some lazy-arsed chink that can't type.

          I blame all this on Obamanism.
          The Honorable HTannor (Pro NRA, Anti-Homer Marriage), Judge, Freehold Supreme Court

          "Credo elvem etiam vivere"

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          • #6
            Re: Five Steps to Making Godly Decisions

            This slope's name is chin win?
            Christians are superior because we possess an understanding that unbelievers lack. It is through the Power of Jesus only the converted mind is able to understand what is going on in the world; what the Communists are really up to; what Satan's intentions are. Most unbelievers do not even believe in Satan and cannot understand his tactics.


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            • #7
              Re: Five Steps to Making Godly Decisions

              Originally posted by Levi Jones View Post
              This slope's name is chin win?
              It should be chin lose.
              The Only Real Climate Change Will be Hell!

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              • #8
                Re: Five Steps to Making Godly Decisions

                Hey Hop Sing, what are you doing here? Looking for a job? Send me your resume if you're under 20.
                Who Will Jesus Damn?

                Here is a partial list from just a few scripture verses:

                Hypocrites (Matthew 24:51), The Unforgiving (Mark 11:26), Homosexuals (Romans 1:26, 27), Fornicators (Romans 1:29), The Wicked (Romans 1:29), The Covetous (Romans 1:29), The Malicious (Romans 1:29), The Envious (Romans 1:29), Murderers (Romans 1:29), The Deceitful (Romans 1:29), Backbiters (Romans 1:30), Haters of God (Romans 1:30), The Despiteful (Romans 1:30), The Proud (Romans 1:30), Boasters (Romans 1:30), Inventors of evil (Romans 1:30), Disobedient to parents (Romans 1:30), Covenant breakers (Romans 1:31), The Unmerciful (Romans 1:31), The Implacable (Romans 1:31), The Unrighteous (1Corinthians 6:9), Idolaters (1Corinthians 6:9), Adulterers (1Corinthians 6:9), The Effeminate (1Corinthians 6:9), Thieves (1Corinthians 6:10), Drunkards (1Corinthians 6:10), Reviler (1Corinthians 6:10), Extortioners (1Corinthians 6:10), The Fearful (Revelation 21:8), The Unbelieving (Revelation 21:8), The Abominable (Revelation 21:8), Whoremongers (Revelation 21:8), Sorcerers (Revelation 21:8), All Liars (Revelation 21:8)

                Need Pastoral Advice? Contact me privately at PastorEzekiel@landoverbaptist.net TODAY!!

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