Many people ask themselves, “What is God’s will for my life?” I’ve asked this many times. We want to know why we are on earth. We desire to know our unique purpose. Let’s talk today about how to know God’s will.
William Barclay says, “There are two great days in a person’s life—the day we are born and the day we discover why.” It’s the “why” that gives us a mission. It’s understanding the “why” that sets our feet in motion as we work to live up to our God-given potential.
The why of our existence starts with the heart. “Keep your heart with all diligence, for out of it spring the issues of life,” we read in Proverbs 4:23.
Want to know why a man does what he does? Look at his heart. As I learned as a child, “What goes in, is what comes out.” And what comes out explains a lot about what we believe about what our purpose is in life.
Many times when we are seeking how to know God’s will, we want to know what He wants us to do as individuals. Yet even more helpful is understanding what God has done and what He desires to do in our generation.
Henry Blackaby says, “You need to see the heart of God. What has God always been looking for? Then, what does God look for when He comes to your life? What is He looking for in our generation? Does any of this match your life—not because you say it does, but because God has confirmed it Himself?”
As I thought about this, I realized that for all generations God’s heart has desired a few things, when we learn this we also learn how to know God’s will.
⁃ For faithfulness in His followers
⁃ For men and women to raise their children in righteousness (right living)
⁃ For His Word—Truth—to go out to the nations
I know God’s will for my life will line up with His will for the world. The “why” behind “why I was born” will line up with God’s “why” for every believer.
This makes me think of my own life. As a servant of God, I am called to understand His heart for all generations. And I am called to listen and obey to my part in seeing His will come to pass.
God spoke of this type of calling for His prophet and priest Samuel:
“Then I’ll establish for myself a true priest. He’ll do what I want him to do, be what I want him to be. I’ll make his position secure and he’ll do his work freely in the service of my anointed one.” 1 Samuel 2:35 (The Message)
Many times we want to know God’s will so that we can set to work at tasks for God. We think of it like getting a homework assignment. “Do this, this, and this and you’re good to go.”
Instead, God’s will is following God’s heart <click to tweet>. It’s allowing God to fill us and work through us, moment by moment. This might look different throughout our lives. Sometimes we called this “seasons of service.” But even though the outward expression of how we are to love and serve others changes, the focus really is loving and serving as an outpouring of God in us.
In my life, I’ve had seasons of service. I’ve written various books and articles. I’ve helped to launch a crisis pregnancy center. I’ve mentored young mothers around the country. I’ve raised kids in four different decades. (Wow, that makes me sound old!) God’s will wasn’t following those specific tasks. God’s will was knowing His heart and stepping out to serve as I felt Him leading me at the moment. It’s not getting homework or marching orders, it’s staying so connected with the heart of God that I understand His still, small voice directing me day by day.
As an author of forty books, I understand this. I don’t know every word that will fill the book when I start Page 1. Instead, I trust that the story will unfold one word at a time.
When it comes to how to know God’s will, it isn’t about a “calling” for our whole lives, but rather it’s tuning in to the Author of Life and allowing the story of our lives to unfold as we connect with Jesus, the Word <click to tweet>.
I am not called to write . . . I am called to be a servant of God.
I am not called to be a Christian, homeschooling mom . . . I am called to be a servant of God.
I am not called to be a godly wife . . . I am called to be a servant of God.
I am not called to start a crisis pregnancy center, mentor teen moms, lead Bible studies, go on mission trips, care for my aging grandmother, or adopt children . . . I am called to be a servant of God.
Because I married, my service to God means serving my husband. Because I have children, my service to God means loving them and raising them to know Him.
During moments in my life, my service to God has meant helping to start a crisis pregnancy center, mentoring teenage moms, leading Bible studies, going on mission trips, caring for my elderly grandmother, and adopting children. But those are just an outpouring of God in me, of my heart understanding His.
God didn’t give me a list of marching orders, and I’ve been checking them off. Instead, I’ve dug into His Word and I’ve grown in my relationship with Him. As I’ve understood His heart, I’ve served Him in the ways He’s brought before me, for His glory. It’s saying “yes” to what’s on His heart as He reveals it to me.
What I do comes out of who I am as a child of God.
Who I am comes out of where my heart is.
Where my heart is depends on how lined up I am with where God’s heart is.
I discover God’s heart when I read His Word, surround myself with His fellow servants, and love and serve those around me who need His love and grace.
Where does this leave me? I cannot be proud of the things I do—of being a mom or an author or a mentor. Instead, it leaves me humble that God has chosen to love and serve through me. Instead, it continually takes me to my knees as I pray and ask Jesus to line up my heart with His.
What is God’s will for your life? You’ll discover the answer by first asking, “What is God’s will?” And then my connecting with Him—in His Word, through prayer, and through fellowship with other believers. It’s only then that you’ll follow His will in what He wants you to do and who He wants you to be today.
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Women often pack their lives with family, friends, and faithful service, yet still end up feeling empty and unfulfilled. In Walk It Out, Tricia Goyer demonstrates to women that walking out the mandates of Scripture allows God to spark passion and mission within them.
Whether believers realize it or not, God intended for them to do what the Bible says: adopt the orphan, take the gospel into all the world, and care for the needy. These are mandates that point believers down the path of true living and eternal life.
Sometimes those steps are easy, but many times they require a move outside of what feels safe or secure. When women stop focusing on their own dreams and purposes and instead focus on God’s dreams and purposes, everything changes. Walk it out
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