Living Life On Purpose-Knowing God's Will

  • Knowing God's Will






Summary: If you’re serious about knowing God’s will, then don’t say no to God’s will.


Series- Living Life On Purpose


Scripture: Romans 12:1-5


Date: 13, August, 2017


            12 I beseech you therefore, brethren, by the mercies of God, that ye present your bodies a living sacrifice, holy, acceptable unto God, which is your reasonable service.
            And be not conformed to this world: but be ye transformed by the renewing of your mind, that ye may prove what is that good, and acceptable, and perfect, will of God.
            For I say, through the grace given unto me, to every man that is among you, not to think of himself more highly than he ought to think; but to think soberly, according as God hath dealt to every man the measure of faith.
            For as we have many members in one body, and all members have not the same office:
            So we, being many, are one body in Christ, and every one members one of another.
        An older Pastor came out on her porch every morning, and would raise her arms to the sky and shout, “Praise the Lord.” He is known as "Hallelujah Pastor". One day an atheist moved next door and over time he became very irritated with this worshipping Pastor. So every morning after he heard his exclamation of praise, he would shout out, “There is no Lord!” This went on for several months, then one morning in the middle of winter the pastor stepped onto her front porch and shouted, “Praise the Lord! Lord, please reveal your will to me because I have no food and I’m starving. Please provide for me, O Lord!”The next morning, when she came out on her porch there were two huge bags of groceries sitting there. “Praise the Lord!” he cried out. “He has provided groceries for me!” Just then the atheist jumped out of the bushes and shouted, “There is no Lord. I bought those groceries!” Without skipping a beat, the lady threw her arms in the air and shouted, “Praise the Lord! He has provided me with groceries and He made the devil pay for them!”
            We've
         all asked questions like these at one time or another: How can I know God’s will? Is He really interested in me as an individual? Is there a master plan for my life? We’re beginning a six-part series that we’re calling “Living Life on Purpose” and our topic today is “Knowing God’s Will” from Romans 12. One of my classmates from my Bible College days posted something on Facebook this week that caught my attention: “If I could give a Christian only one chapter to live by it would be Romans 12.”
        Please turn in your Bibles to the twelfth chapter of Romans where I want us to notice the very first word in verse 1: “Therefore….” Whenever you see the word “therefore” in the Bible you should always ask what it’s there for. When we come to this chapter, Paul is making a shift from doctrine to duty, from creed to conduct, from principles to practice, and from beliefs to behavior. We must not only know, we must grow and instead of just filling our heads, God’s Word must also affect our attitudes and actions. It’s as if he’s saying, “Based on everything that I've just said, this is what you now need to put into practice.”
        I love what Martin Luther said about this book that literally changed his life and became the rallying cry for the Reformation: 
        “Romans is the chief part of the New Testament, and the very purest gospel, which, indeed, deserves that a Christian not only know it word for word by heart but deal with it daily as with daily bread of the soul. For it can never be read or considered too much or too well, and the more it is handled, the more delightful it becomes, and the better it tastes.”
        This past week at our  meeting we had the privilege of meeting with one TPHIM member. He has been sensing that God may be leading him to serve as a lay pastor in some church and asked us to consider licensing him to the ministry. One of the questions we asked him was this: “What’s your favorite book in the Bible?” Without hesitation he told us that it was Romans. After meeting with him and asking him a bunch of questions, we have decided to license him for the ministry.
        I've spent over three years and 44 different sermons roaming through the first eleven chapters of Romans. While I've taken breaks during this time, we always come back to this incredible section of Scripture and it’s my prayer that Romans will become more delightful the more we study it. At this pace, we should be finished in another year or so (or not). I encourage you to go on our website (www.pottershomeinternational.org) and read or reread some of the sermons in order to more fully understand Romans 1-11.
        There are at least four “therefores” in the book of Romans that help unlock its teaching and provide a summary of where we've been. 3:20 is the “therefore” of condemnation: “Therefore no one will be declared righteous in his sight by observing the law; rather, through the law we become conscious of sin.” 5:1 is the “therefore” of justification: “Therefore, since we have been justified through faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ.” 8:1 is the “therefore” of assurance: “Therefore, there is now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus.” And Romans 12:1 is the “therefore” of surrender.
        The immediate context for our text today is the wonderfully deep doxology found at the end of Romans 11: “Oh, the depth of the riches of the wisdom and knowledge of God! How unsearchable His judgments, and His paths beyond finding out. ‘Who has known the mind of the Lord? Or who has been his counselor? Who has ever given to God, that God should repay him?’ For from Him and through Him and to Him are all things. To Him be the glory! Amen.”
        After spending so much time discussing doctrine, Paul is overcome by the depth of God’s glory and His marvelous mercy and it’s as if he can’t help but break out into an unbridled exclamation of praise. It’s in this context that we read the very next verse in Romans 12:1: “Therefore, I urge you, brothers, in view of God’s mercy, to offer your bodies as living sacrifices, holy and pleasing to God-this is your spiritual act of worship.”
        I want to pause right here to say that for some of us, this verse is so well-known that we’re already starting to check out. 
        The word beseech is a very,very strong word in the original language. It is a word of desperation. It is used of a slave who is being beaten to death, and he is pleading with his master for mercy, to spare his life. Paul is using such a word to urge us to present our bodies a living sacrifice, holy, acceptable unto God. In chapter nine, one of the privileges that Israel had and forfeited was that they should perform the service of God. This meant they had the privilege of being priests and kings.In the Old Testament, the priests offered up sacrifices that had been ceremonially washed, but the sacrifices were the bodies of bulls and goats. In the New Testament we are not under Levitical law. Our priesthood does not come from Levi, but from Melchisedec. Our priesthood is a higher order. We become a sacrifice. The Lord Jesus Christ was a priest after the order of Melchisedec. The sacrifice that Melchisedec offered up when he met Abraham in Genesis chapter fourteen, was bread and wine (Gen.14:17-20). The bread and wine is a type of the communion service; it was symbolic of offering the body and the blood of the Lord Jesus Christ. It was written of Christ in Hebrews 10:5, “A body thou hast prepared for me.” Thus, the Lord Jesus Christ offered up His body. He presented His body a living sacrifice unto His Father.This thought is very important, because as the high priest offered up his body, so we should offer up our bodies. It is a total consecration, a total offering of ourself. The Apostle Paul cautions us that we are only able to accomplish this by the mercy of God. In Hebrews 9:14, Paul stated that Christ offered Himself [by the power of] the eternal Spirit to God. Christ was enveloped with the Holy Spirit, and through the power and mercy of the Holy Spirit He was enabled to offer up His body without spot unto God. It is only through the mercy of God that we can do likewise.There is one point that we must be very clear on. Jesus Christ, as the Head of the body, the Head of the Church, offered Himself as a spotless sacrifice. He was holy, harmless, undefiled, and separate from sinners (Heb. 7:26). As the Head was, so should be His Body. It is absolutely possible for us to become a spotless sacrifice, too. Paul gives ample proof of this—“And the very God of peace sanctify you wholly; and I pray God your whole spirit and soul and body be preserved blameless unto the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ” (1 Thes. 5:23). This is total sanctification.What, therefore, is our reasonable service? The service of God is the execution of the priestly office. The service of God is for a man or woman to be a priest who is made into a spotless sacrifice, who then also leads others unto a sanctified spirit, soul, and body. The Apostle Peter says we are “to offer up spiritual sacrifices, acceptable to God by Jesus Christ” (1 Pet. 2:5). This includes a living sacrifice of our bodies that are disciplined and free of moral impurity of any kind (1 Thes. 4:3). The Lord Jesus Christ also brings out the theme of spiritual sacrifices when He says, “The true worshippers shall worship the Father in Spirit and in truth: for the Father seeketh such to worship him.” Therefore, by the mercies of God, we must present our whole spirit, soul, and body to Him, to offer up those spiritual sacrifices which are a sweet savor unto Him. From many verses throughout the Word of God, it is evident that we are to be as living sacrifices, holy and acceptable unto God which is our reasonable service. This is the norm required of every child of God.
          ["Romans - More Than Conquerers" . Bailey, J
          Brian  Waverly, New York 1994.]
        Stay with me today because I want us to see that Romans 12:1 must be linked to all that comes before it and it cannot be fully understood unless the verses that come after it are included. I want to propose that if you’re serious about knowing God’s will, then you can’t say no to God’s will. Ephesians 5:17 says, “Therefore do not be foolish, but understand what the Lord’s will is.” In order to know God’s will, Romans 12 teaches that there are at least three conditions that must be met.

        1. We need to be saved (1a). 

        The message few years ago was very clear on this point: Prepare for a delay, but be ready today. Nagraj called me this week and we chatted for awhile. When we were finished he reminded me that Jesus is coming soon. To which I replied, “Not soon enough!” At the end of the services we gave a call for conversion and around 10 people raised their hands, indicating that they had prayed to receive Jesus Christ into their lives!
        Based on all that God has done, Paul says here in verse 1, “I urge you, brothers…” Even though he could have used a command, he instead makes an appeal. This word means to “call near” or “to invite.” Notice that he refers to them as “brothers,” indicating his affection for them as members of God’s family. The baseline for knowing God’s will is belief. The question becomes, “Are you saved?” Until you are, you won’t be in a position to know God’s will. In John 10:4, Jesus makes this interesting statement: “his sheep follow him because they know his voice.” Those who are in relationship with the Shepherd have the ability to follow because they are tuned into the Shepherd’s voice.
        This plea is made “in view of God’s mercy.” The original word used here for “mercy” is actually plural and refers to God’s multitude of mercies. He is not merciful just once but again and again. He is consistently and constantly full of mercy. 
        It’s interesting that Paul doesn't say, “In light of God’s grace” but instead focuses on mercy. Why is that? God’s grace is demonstrated when we get what we don’t deserve, whereas His mercy is what keeps us from getting what we do deserve. Lamentations 3:22: “Through the LORD’s mercies we are not consumed, because His compassions fail not” (NKJV). One of the best motivations to live for Christ is a good memory of all the mercies we've received.
        I met with someone this week and she was so moved by God’s mercy that she prayed to receive Christ. I wonder if there’s anyone here today who needs to make that same decision. If you’re serious about knowing God’s will, then you can’t say no to God’s will.

        2. We need to be surrendered (1b-2). 

        First, we need to be saved and second, we need to be surrendered. Paul gives us two ways to fully express our surrender to God.

        * Give Him your body. 

        We are urged, in view of the many mercies of God “to offer our bodies as living sacrifices.” This word “offer” is a technical term that was used to describe the bringing and presenting of an animal for sacrifice on an altar. To “offer” means, “to present once and for all.” This idea of a “living sacrifice” must have been a novel idea to the Jews of that day. This was something they had not heard of before, except perhaps in the case of Abraham offering Isaac upon the altar. When we are called to present our “bodies” to the Lord, we are exhorted to offer our total being to Him, not just bits and pieces. God does not just want to be a “part” of our lives; He wants us to be completely committed to Him.
        Paul continues by saying that our life offering is to be “holy and pleasing to God.” When we give our best to Him, it will be pleasing, or agreeable to Him. This then is our “spiritual act of worship.” Worship is not just what we do here on Sunday mornings. True worship is the presenting of our bodies as living sacrifices to the Lord and living holy and pleasing lives, every day of the week.

        * Give Him your mind. 

        Verse 1 calls for a decisive commitment to fully surrender. The first part of verse 2 tells us how we can maintain that commitment: “Do not conform any longer to the pattern of this world but be transformed by the renewing of your mind…” The tense of this verse indicates that we must stop conforming, implying that this is something that we’re prone to do. The word “conformed” is the word that we get our English word “scheme” from. It’s sometimes translated “fashioned.” Paul is urging us to stop being pushed into the fashion of the world. J.B. Philips offers this paraphrase: “Don’t let the world squeeze you into its mold.” Sometimes we are so conformed to the world that there is little noticeable difference between Christians and non-Christians.
        Some of you are facing some incredible temptations right now. You feel yourself being pulled to conform, to go along with the way your friends are leading you. Don’t give in! Unfortunately, some of us have internalized the world’s values and fashions so much that we don’t even recognize it anymore. It’s like walking into a dark theater in the middle of the day. When you first go in, everything is really dark. But after a while, you can see normally, that is, until you walk back outside. If you spend enough time conforming to the world, you become so accustomed to the darkness that you think it’s now normal.
        We’re to stop being conformed and start being transformed. The word “transformed” refers to an inner change. We get the word “metamorphosis” from this Greek word. 
        Ill. There’s a story told of a very ugly man with a hideous face. He was good and kind, but people were terrified of him and would not stay in his presence. As you can imagine, he was very lonely. The thing he wanted most was to marry one of the women in his town. Because of his frightening face, he decided to wear a mask of a handsome face so that he could win her love. He kept this mask on 24/7. Soon he was married and living the happy life he had always wanted.After awhile his wife noticed that he was wearing a mask and asked him to show her his true face. He slowly took it off, bracing himself for the gasp of horror he knew would soon be coming. But instead of screaming, his wife just smiled. The man ran to a mirror and realized that the years of wearing the disguise had transformed his face into the features of the mask.
        When we put on Christ and wear his face, we find our lives transformed into his likeness. 2 Corinthians 3:18: “And we, who with unveiled faces all reflect the Lord’s glory, are being transformed into his likeness with ever-increasing glory, which comes from the Lord, who is the Spirit.”
        I’m greatly challenged by what William Booth, the founder of the Salvation said near the end of his life: 
        “God had all there was of me. There have been others who had greater plans, greater opportunities than I; but from the day I got a vision of what God could do, I made up my mind God would have all there was of William Booth.”
        Notice the last part of verse 2: “Then we will be able to test and approve what God’s will is - his good, pleasing, and perfect will.” God will not force us into anything. Do you see the conditional clause? Give Him your body and your mind and don’t be conformed but be transformed, then you will find God’s good, pleasing and perfect will. Some of us want to know what God’s will is before we’ll do it. Like when someone asks, “Can you help me with something?” and we respond with, “It depends what it is.” God wants our will and then He’ll show us His will.
        If you’re serious about knowing God’s will, then you can’t say no to God’s will.
        But it’s no use sitting around waiting to have the will of God revealed to us. This is an active verb. We learn His will by doing. When you wonder what God’s will is for your life, the first place to start is by living out Romans 12:1-2. Until you offer Him your body and your mind, you won’t understand His good, pleasing, and perfect will.
        We tend to focus God’s will on the what – our occupation, or the where – our location, but God is more interested in our transformation. Have you presented yourself to Him in complete surrender? The answer to this question will determine your ability to tap into God’s limitless resources. Think of it this way. Why should God reveal His will to you if He doesn't think you’re all that interested in doing it anyway? Someone put it like this: “Each of us need to decide if we want to go where God is leading.”
        Actually, we’re prone to view God’s will from a human perspective. I want to know the will of God that is good, perfect and acceptable to me. But Romans is teaching that God’s good, acceptable and perfect will has to do with Him. Further, the emphasis is not so much on discovering God’s will as it is in doing His will.
        And so, make sure you’re saved and then make sure you’re surrendered. There’s a third condition that we must meet if we’re serious about knowing God’s will.

        3. We need to be sharpened by others (3-5). 

        As we move into the rest of Romans, we come face-to-face with the truth that we are designed to live out God’s will in the context of relationships.

        * Denounce pride (3).

         “For by the grace given me I say to every one of you: Do not think of yourself more highly than you ought, but rather think of yourself with sober judgment, in accordance with the measure of faith God has given you.” Thinking more highly of ourselves than we should is one of the greatest deterrents to knowing and doing God’s will. How does it feel to be around someone who boasts and brags about his or her abilities? Never forget this truth: Faith is a gift from God and He uses us simply because He wants to. We’re to avoid thinking too highly of ourselves and we’re to avoid thinking too low of ourselves. Don’t be like Diotrephes who was called out in 3 John 9-10: “I wrote to the church, but Diotrephes, who loves to be first, will have nothing to do with us. So if I come, I will call attention to what he is doing, gossiping maliciously about us. Not satisfied with that, he refuses to welcome the brothers. He also stops those who want to do so and puts them out of the church.”

        * Celebrate differences (4). 

        “Just as each of us has one body with many members, and these members do not all have the same function.” We must also remember that just as the different parts of our bodies have different functions, so too, in the body of Christ, each of us have been given different gifts and roles. We can’t do it alone. If God’s purposes are to be accomplished and His church is to grow, every one of us is important. Nobody is a nobody in the Body of Christ. While no one can do everything, everyone can do something. We’ll talk more about this next week.

        * Embrace dependency (5).

         “So in Christ we who are many form one body, and each member belongs to all the others.” While we’re uniquely designed, we've been made to function in community with one another because each of us belongs to one another. I might be strong in the area of my gift, but I am weak in the areas where others have been gifted. When tempted to use the word “me,” inject the word “we” instead.
        I read a fascinating new book this summer by Kevin DeYoung and Ted Kluck called, “Why We Love the Church.” In it they discuss why so many people are “church-leavers” who believe that spirituality is hot, but religion is not. Increasingly we hear talk of a “churchless Christianity,” where some want God but not the church, and fellowship without commitment. The authors quote Chuck Colson who perceptively points out: “We live in a therapeutic age where everything is measured by how much I get out of it. The church ought to be measured by what we put into it for God and others” (page 145).
        If we’re serious about knowing and doing God’s will, then we must stop thinking individualistically and begin to think corporately. A letter to the editor in “Christianity Today” long time ago hit it on the head: “He exposes the unchecked individualism that permeates the evangelical church and too often diminishes our witness to a whimper” (September 2009). We cannot look at ourselves as an island, independent of all others. We must see ourselves as fully functioning members of the body of Christ, with certain gifts that are necessary to the equipping and ministry of the entire church. There is individuality within the body, because there are many members, all with a different role to play. But there is no room for individualism, for we are inter-dependent. We must rely on other members of the body just as they must rely on us.
        I can think of three ways to live out our dependency on others. 
        First, live out your faith at home, in the context of family. 
        Second, if you’re ready to align yourself with this church, our next membership class begins on September 20th. 
        Third, as a matter of stewardship and as way to demonstrate our connectedness to each other, let’s involve.
        I came across something called, “This is My Church.”
        “My church is composed of people just like me. It will be friendly if I am. It will do great work if I work. It will make generous gifts to many causes if I’m generous. It will bring others into the fellowship if I bring them. Therefore, with God’s help, I dedicate myself to the task of being all these things I want my church to be.”
        This is similar to an article written by Mavis Williams called, “The Perfect Church.”
        If you should find the perfect church
        Without one fault or smear,
        For goodness sake!
        Don’t join that church;
        You’d spoil the atmosphere.
        But since no perfect church exists
        Made up of imperfect men,
        Then let’s cease looking for that church
        And love the church we’re in.
        Did you know that you belong to the person sitting next to you? We’re on the same team with each of us playing different roles. Don’t get puffed up by your own importance and don’t take yourself out of the game by thinking you don’t matter. We need each other because we belong to each other.
        If you’re serious about knowing God’s will, then you can’t say no to God’s will. Make sure that you’re saved, make sure you’re surrendered and make sure you’re being sharpened by others.
        ILL. After World War II, a group of German students volunteered to help rebuild an English cathedral that had been severely damaged by German bombs. As work progressed, they became concerned about a large statue of Jesus, whose arms were outstretched and beneath which was the inscription: “Come unto Me.” Because of the extensive damage they had difficulty trying to restore the hands, which had been completely destroyed. After much discussion, they decided to let the hands remain missing and changed the inscription to: “Christ has no hands but ours.”
        What a great reminder as we transition into communion. The night before Jesus died, he wrestled in prayer and then said these words: “Yet not my will, but yours be done.” Jesus went to the cross for us because He faithfully followed His Father’s will. Let’s remember what He did for us as we determine to be his hands and his feet in our world.

        Communion

        In conclusion, Dr. Bailey says:
        "We should examine our meditations to see whether they are pure, just, and of good report. Philippians 4:8 gives us eight ways to test our thought life. I once had a vision of a pathway into an ear. There were little demons at the end of the path but there were eight gates on the path that they had to pass through. We have to check our thoughts at each of these eight gates. If it gets through all eight gates it will become a part of us. These gates are in accordance to Philippians 4:8. 
    • The first gate is, “Whatsoever things are true.” Is the thought true.
    •  
    • The second gate is, “Whatsoever things are honest.”
    •  
    • The Third gate is, "Is this thought just or righteous?",
    •  
    • The Fourth gate,"Is this thought pure?",
    •  
    • The Fifth gate, "Is this thought is lovely or pleasing?",
    •  
    • The Sixth gate, "Is this thought a good report?",
    •  
    • The Seventh gate is, "Is this thought virtuous?" and
    •  
    • The Eighth gate is, "Is this thought praiseworthy?"
    •  
      • The word think in the Greek means “an act of careful reflection or meditation.” It carries with it the idea of assimilating a thought into our very being so that it aids in molding and strengthening our character. The art of meditation has been long lost in our education system, but in the Kingdom of God it is an art that is essential to cultivate for our spiritual development."
Choice is yours. stay blessed

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