This morning, our
thoughts have turned to the Biblical term of the will. In Scripture, the word
"will" is oftentimes used in verb form by saying, "I will do..." Yet, Scripture
oftentimes uses the word "will" in noun form to reference something that is
perhaps one of the hardest concepts of Scripture for many people to grasp. What
exactly is it? How do we measure the scope of it and its bounds? What fails
the test in relation to the will as it applies to man or even God? These
questions, and many like them, oftentimes lead to prolonged and sometimes heated
debate in theological circles. By the end of this segment, we hope to
investigate exactly what the will is, the application of it to God's children,
and how we should view the will of God.
The will is best
defined as a desire. When someone desires to do a certain thing, we say that it
is their will to do so. If a man desires to eat a certain food, his will is to
eat that particular food. Therefore, the will is an extension - or a simple
manifestation - of some characteristic of the man or his personality. Taking
that very simple analogy, why is it that certain people do certain things? Why
does a man do something that is wicked? Why does a man do something that
is righteous? The answer is the same in both cases. He does it because he
desires to do so. Sometimes ministers talk about the fallen condition of man by
nature and talk about his inability to do that which is righteous, and there
they finish the thought. Truly, fallen man - of the corrupt lineage of Adam -
is incapable of doing that which is pleasing to God (man is totally depraved by
nature), but we should never forget that he still desires to do what he does.
As the old saying goes, he is not just incapable of doing that which is
righteous, but he is unwilling as well. He is perfectly pleased by nature to
roll in the slop and filth of sin, because man enjoys it in his old nature.
Likewise, when God
quickens His people by His grace, they are not just given the ability to please
Him, but they have the desire to do so as well. Their new nature includes the
desire to follow things which are right and good. This is where we reach one of
the great conundrums of discussion. What is the will of man after
regeneration? What is his desire? Years ago, I had a discussion with a fellow,
young minister on this topic, and he asked a series of questions: 1. When I sin,
who is it that wants to?, 2. When I do right, who is it that wants to?, 3. In
both cases, who is it that does not want to? His series of questions revolved
around the language of Paul in Romans 7, where it appears the apostle has an
argument with himself.
While my answers
perhaps frustrated him to no end that night, they are still the same today. The
answer to every one of the three questions was, "You do." Since regenerated man
has two natures with two diametrically opposite desires and appetites, every
action taken by a regenerated person is going to be met with pleasure and
abhorrence. When I act unrighteously, my old nature is perfectly willing and
pleased with that, while my new nature absolutely despises it. When I do
righteously, the roles are reversed. Looking at Paul's language from Romans 7,
he will at times refer to himself in the negative light (that which does evil)
and at other times in the positive light (that which does good). Therefore, it
is Paul in both cases.
What is important
for us to realize about the regenerated man and his will is that no matter the
action taken, it is his will. There are some thoughts about man's nature, will,
etc. post-regeneration that seem to indicate that that man only wants to do one
thing or the other, and whatever happens that he does not want is some alien
force of will that is not really his. My sins come from my own filthy nature
that enjoys committing them. My good deeds come from my righteous nature that
fully desires that I engage in them. In both cases, my desire (stemming from a
particular nature) manifests itself, which shows forth my will or determination
at that time. Since the new nature is nudged and impressed by Spirit and the
old nature still fully wrapped in Adam's filthy rags, we may at times step in
the path of the Spirit's impression or step in that old, fallen path of the
flesh's desires.
Taking the thought
of the will outside of our realm now, how does this apply to God? Since the
regenerated man has divided thoughts and divided appetites, should such a case
be so with God? Does His mind quandary back and forth as to what He should do?
Is He of two minds and desires about things? Certainly the Scriptures
emphatically deny this point. God is not the combination of light and darkness,
good and bad, or sin and righteousness, for His condemnations of the darkness
and sin would be a condemnation against His own character if He was equally
composed of sin and righteousness. (Isaiah 5:20)
Since the thought of
God being divided in will does not stand up to the Scriptural test, how should
we view the will of God? Some believe that it is the will of God that
everything happen just as it transpires throughout human history. Others
believe that nothing is the will of God, and things just randomly happen by
chance after God set it all up. Yet, others believe that God's desires and His
will manifests itself in different forms. Before, we examine each of these
major schools of thought (and there are perhaps others that could be
investigated - but these should suffice for now), let us notice something
inherent about the will of someone.
Since the will can
be termed a desire and since it manifests something about the individual, what
do we say about God when we ascribe things to His will? We say that it
manifests His desire and shows forth His character. Therefore, whatever we
attribute to the will of God, we are attributing to His very character. A man
may be forced to do something against his will - like when a little boy is
forced to eat vegetables he does not care for - but God cannot be forced against
His will: that analogy does not apply. Regardless of how one wants to slice and
dice things and no matter how far they want to parse words, the simple point
remains: whatever someone's will is shows forth what their character and essence
of being is. Like a fruit tree, the will is the fruit that manifests the type
of tree in question.
The term "will of
God" is found in that form 23 times in Scripture. In all but one case (Acts
13:36), the Greek word usage is the same. In the one exception, the word "will"
refers more to the thought of "counsel" rather than the other 22 occurrences
that refer to "desire." Proponents of the "clock-maker" deist theory - God
wound up creation like a clock to simply walk away until He comes back to burn
it all up - certainly have a hard time reconciling that thought to the fact that
God interacts with His people throughout Scripture and faithfully records for us
things that He desires - His will. So, one major school of thought about the
will of God will not stand up to the Scriptural test.
Proponents of the
"all things that happen are according to the will of God" either intentionally
or unintentionally say too much when they say that. Since the will or desire of
God is the subject, do we dare insinuate that God desires the wicked things that
happen to happen? Sometimes the response will be, "Since He has all power to
stop it, the fact that He didn't indicates that He wanted it to happen." Some
even go so far as to say that God "needs" them to happen. Perish the thought!
Yet, the mindset that uses God's omnipotence as the reason that He must desire
that things happen the way they do operates under misguided human perception.
It is man's natural, inherent manner to do something if he is capable of it.
From an early age, little boys on the playground boast and show off what they
can do. God actually shows great power by restraining His power. To say that
He must will or desire it since He does not stop it operates under the fallacy
that power available must be used.
Let us consider what
some of the texts say about the will of God. Mark 3:35 says that whosoever does
the will of God is Christ's mother, brother, or sister. Now, if everyone was
doing the will of God in all things that happen in life, I suppose we would have
to be universalists. For, simple logic demands that all would be related to
Christ, and therefore, joint-heirs together with Him. Since that thought is
patently foolish, we must conclude that not all people do the will of God
(things He desires) to have the blessed privilege of partaking of familial
relations with Him. Romans 12:2 includes an exhortation by Paul not to be
conformed to this world in our behavior but rather transformed (to be more like
Christ) and thereby proving the will of God. Paul describes the will of God
with three adjectives: good, acceptable, and perfect. Do things happen in life
that are not acceptable to God? Absolutely, for He will cast a great many into
the lake of fire for deeds that are unacceptable to His holy person. What about
perfect? We understand that life is not perfect, and things generally go bad
instead of good. How does that line up with Paul's description of God's will?
His will does not have bad or imperfect design, for His desires manifest His
person - goodness and perfection of an infinite degree.
Many other verses
could be employed to show that not everything that happens is according to the
will of God, and therefore, the idea of everything that happens being according
to the will of God, does not pass the Scriptural test either. Let us briefly
examine the third school of thought that I believe accurately scopes and
captures the Biblical thought of the will of God.
Paul asked a
question in Romans 9:19-20 about who hath resisted the will of God. The answer
is: who can reply against God - it is just as foolish as clay condemning the
potter. If God chooses (wills) to do something a certain way, no one can reply
against it. Whatever that decision is, no person is able to say, "God can't do
that." However, God has given us some ideas in His word of things He cannot
do. Some seem to think that God can act in any given way, since He is God.
Truly, God can do and does do the things that please Him, but we know there are
some things that do not please Him - like lying - which is something He cannot
do. (Titus 1:2) Therefore, the point Paul makes in Romans 9 is that no one can
say that God is wrong to choose some and not others. As the sovereign Being, no
one can stand up and say, "You're wrong."
Yet, in that same
vein, no one can say that God is wrong to do other things certain ways.
Certainly, God has the power to give regenerated creatures all knowledge at the
very moment of regeneration. Yet, it pleased God (it was His will) to save us -
give us knowledge - by the foolishness of preaching. (I Corinthians 1:21) It
pleases God when we worship Him in spirit and in truth. (John 4:23-24) Does He
force us to do these things? Scripture denies that He does, and though He is
certainly capable of doing that, it is not His desire to force us to do so.
Like a parent that could blindly force a child into submission about everything,
God could force us to a certain lifestyle at all times. Yet, as we try to
instruct our children (and yes sometimes make them submit with a spanking), so
God instructs us as our parent (and yes sometimes gives us a spanking). (Hebrews
12)
There is so much
more that could be said on the subject, but let us close with this thought. Man
after the new birth is truly a complex and at times confused creature, but God
is never so. Man on one hand desires wickedness, and on the other hand desires
goodness. God always desires goodness. Seeing this be the case, these simple
conclusions should be in order. Bad things that happen are according to the
will of man. Good things that happen stem at their source from God. Though
able to prevent bad things from happening, we should never attribute rotten
deeds of man to God's desire. Too often, the wrong question is asked about
things. Rather than ask, "Why do bad things happen to good people?" We should
ask, "Why do good things happen to such bad people?" Truly, the will of God to
do good unto such worms as we are is a desire that defies the imagination, and
with that glorious thought, may we renew our desire to please Him every day that
we live.
In Hope,
Bro Philip
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