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| What
God Wants
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I
“rendered to Caesar” today. Our property taxes are late
after January 31, so I sent in the payment to avoid the
penalty. I didn’t enjoy watching the mailman take that check
away, but there are some things in life you just do out of
necessity. I suppose paying your taxes is one of them.
Sadly, some people see their service to God in the same way.
It’s a matter of “have to” instead of “want to.”
There is no joy or happiness involved in it, only a mere going
through the motions. To them, discipleship itself has become a
tax or a burden rather than a blessing.
That’s not what God wants. It certainly is not the spirit
behind His favor toward us. All that He provides is a
demonstration of His love toward man, the pinnacle of His
creation. What does He want from him in return?
God wants workers who want to. Not everyone loves
their job. Getting up every morning is a chore. Going to the
office is a seemingly unending cycle of monotony. Even coming
home only signals the end of a process that will repeat itself
in a matter of hours. God’s work must be viewed in a
different way.
The Lord’s desire is for a people who follow His will with a
“pure heart and a good conscience and a sincere faith” (1
Tim. 1:5). He wants disciples who choose to serve Him because
they trust that His commandments are not burdensome. He wants
children who are faithful to their Father out of love, not
just for fear of the penalty of disobedience. He wants workers
who can rejoice even in suffering instead of constantly
complaining or bragging about it. God’s will for us is that
we never want to be off duty.
God wants worshipers who want to. The worship service
is not a box to be checked off so that we can get it out of
the way and move on to something “important.” It ought to
be considered the focal point of our entire week, what we plan
to do first before everything else on our schedule. Why?
Because our parents make us go or so the elders won’t keep
calling us if we don’t show up? No, because we want to.
Forsaking the assembly was already a problem in the First
Century as the writer of Hebrews identified that as “the
habit of some” (Heb. 10:25). But perfect attendance
doesn’t solve the problem either. True worship must flow
from a thankful heart, from one who is glad to go up to the
house of the Lord (Psa. 122:1). If our life’s goal is to
“grow with a growth which is from God” (Col. 2:19), where
else would we want to be when the door of opportunity is
opened?
God wants husbands and wives who want to. We know
that God hates divorce (Mal. 2:16). Recent proponents of gay
marriage have used the escalating divorce rates to prove that
heterosexuals are in no position to act as an authority on who
has the right to marry (as if one sin sanctions another.) But
it was the Lord, not man, who long ago legislated the matter.
Woman was created a “helper suitable” for the man (Gen.
2:18). God Himself joins a husband and his wife together and
makes them one flesh (Gen. 2:24; Matt. 19:6). That gives Him
the right to rule on what He wants in the marriage
relationship.
Just as simply showing up to the building does not qualify as
worship, merely living in the same house does not constitute a
union. Husbands who are selfish with their time and only think
about their own needs are not loving their wives as Christ
loved the church. Wives who abandon their God-given role are
not pleasing to the Lord. No one has to get married. But
everyone who is married should want to follow God’s desire
and design for a happy home. In so doing, we not only show our
reverence to Him who made us one flesh, we graciously serve
our fellow heir of the grace of life.
God knows and wants what is best for us. His desire should be
our pleasure.
Bubba Garner
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