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"I
often asked the Lord where my energy, enthusiasm, dedication, hard
work and spirit would be the most beneficial in reaching a great
many people and he pointed the way..."
What
an admirable attitude this person has and what great things we
might expect to see in their life: We all need to learn to ask the
Lord (Matt. 7:7-11) and to allow Him to point the way (Jer.
10:23). However, the nobility of such a statement is determined by
our concept of what it means to "ask the Lord" and how
and where we think He will "point the way".
Some
ask the Lord to "point the way" with their minds made up
beforehand about what they want to do. They have confused pleasing
the Lord with pleasing self. Please read Jer. 42:1—43:3. The
people came to Jeremiah with a request: they wanted to know
"the way in which we should walk and the thing that we should
do... whether it is pleasant or unpleasant, we will listen to the
voice of the Lord our God" (Jer. 42:1-6). Jeremiah did as
they asked but when he told them what the Lord said, their
response was, "You are telling a lie: The Lord our God has
not sent you to say, 'You are not to enter Egypt to reside
there'." (43:2). The reason for this response was that they
had already made up their minds about what they wanted to do
(41:17-18). Others, however, ask with a view toward finding and
doing the Lord's will rather than their own (Matt. 7:24-27; 26:39;
Jo. 7:17).
Some
ask the Lord subjectively to point the way, looking within, to the
"inner light" until they "feel" He has
answered. These
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have confused asking the Lord with asking
self. Saul said, "I verily thought with myself that I ought
to do many things" (Acts 26:9). But, because he acted upon
the basis of an emotion (anger, 26:11), he reached conclusions
"contrary to the name of Jesus..." There is no
difference between Saul and those today who determine
"truth" upon an emotional basis: Joy — "I would
not give the feeling in my heart...” Pity — "What about
the natives who have never heard of baptism?..." On the other
hand there are those who ask the Lord objectively, looking
without, for sure guidance and certain knowledge (1 Jno. 2:3,5b-6;
3:19, 24; 4:2,6,13), allowing emotions to follow as a result of
obedience rather than the basis upon which "truth" is
determined (Jo. 15:11; 1 Jno. 1:4).
Some
believe that as a result of such "asking" the Lord has
"pointed" in the direction of activities that are in
conflict with Divine revelation (remember Nadab and Abihu, Lev.
10:1-2?) and no amount of reasoning will convince them otherwise
("It can't be wrong when it feels so right"). But others
will not even think of acting until first they are sure it is
"in the name of the Lord" (Col. 3:17).
Now
for "the rest of the story" we began in the first
paragraph. The young woman making that statement affirms that when
she asked the Lord for guidance, "...he pointed the way to
the Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders... and I followed."
David Smitherman
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