Wanting What God Wants

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Wish lists are a time-honored tradition. Around Christmas or a child’s birthday, they delineate what gifts they want, sometimes in order of preference. More recently “bucket lists” have become like wish lists for adults. Instead of detailing what gifts they desire, it details what they want to accomplish or do in their lives.

As Christians, we know that we need to filter these lists through the “Lord-willing” paradigm. We hold these things loosely because we know that God might have other plans. However, sometimes holding them loosely may not be enough. When God plans interrupts ours, do we merely accept His plans or do we delight in wanting what He wants? In other words, are we more focused on wanting what He wants than we are on achieving our own goals and ambitions? Is He more important than our plans?

This doesn’t just pertain when what is on our lists are bad things – or even morally neutral things. Sometimes they might be very good things. We want to be married, and God says “not now” or maybe “not ever.” We want to have children (which Scripture makes clear are a blessing), yet God desires another path for us. We may want to embark on some great service or ministry, and God says “no.” All of these may be good things in and of themselves, and God may use them to accomplish great things in people’s lives, but it is up to God to decide whether they are good things for us. We must recognize that He is the standard for goodness, not only theoretically but in His provision in our lives as well. Therefore, we must not only trust Him, but learn to desire the things that He has planned over our own.

This is not easy. Nor does it mean that we shouldn’t ask God for the things that we want (See Lk. 18:1-8). It does mean, however, that in asking for what we want, we commit ahead of time to delighting in what He provides, knowing that what He has prepared for our lives is far better than what we could design.

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Pre-count

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If you have ever been on a field trip with children or have gone to camp, you know the ritual that happens prior to the bus departing. Whoever is in charge counts the number of young people that are going on the drive. The goal is that by counting the kids beforehand you are better prepared for the eventual trip back home. You can make sure that all the kids who went with you also return..

We have our own ways of preparing for the future. One way that we rarely consider is to engage in our own form of the pre-count. In Philippians 3:7-8 Paul says:

I count everything as loss because of the surpassing worth of knowing Christ Jesus my Lord. For his sake I have suffered the loss of all things and count them as rubbish, in order that I may gain Christ.

Did you notice what Paul considered a loss?

Everything.

The things he had gained through his time as a leader in the Jewish religious community – his reputation, his wealth, his prominence  – all of that he considered a loss. But everything doesn’t just include things in the past – it includes everything in the future too. He knew that whatever benefits or blessings he might experience in the days ahead wouldn’t compare to what he already obtained – knowing His Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ.

In a similar way, we can not only count everything in our past a loss compared to Jesus, but we can know that what this world holds for us in the future is as well. This means that His children need not worry about what the future has in store;  good or bad it is a “loss” compared to what we already have.

The purpose of the bus ride pre-count is to better prepare for the future.  When we do this in our own lives, when we know that what God has already provided, a relationship with Him through the death and resurrection of His Son, is of more value than anything that has already happened or that will happened, we too are better prepared for what the days ahead may hold.

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