How to Know God’s Will; Letter to a Son

Some Motherly Advice

My third son was asking my take on how to know God’s will. He was in the middle of life-changing spiritual growth and was amazed and enthused by all of it. His whole being seemed different, more alive, more in-tune with the spiritual. Even his countenance was freed from looking downcast. My heart delighted in this wonderful change. I’d worried about him.

My son was pondering his future and what God would have him to do. He was curious what I thought. I said a few things but wasn’t fully prepared, caught off-guard by the question. My answer was inadequate. I believe understanding God’s will is not exactly like most Christians tout. There’s no formula involved. Knowing God’s will is discerned through other means.

I wanted to encourage my son, but I also wanted to slow him down a bit without being negative. Sometimes Christians can rush into making choices before adequately discerning the thing. They act on impulse thinking it is God’s will, when it really isn’t. We all can do that, because of our human bent to believe our desires are God’s desires and etc. I didn’t want that scenario to be true for him, but I also didn’t want to impede what God was doing in his life.

After he returned to his home in another state, I decided to write him an email letter. I wished to expand on the points from our earlier conversation.

These concepts are apropos to all people who desire to walk in unity with our Lord. We  can know God’s will and walk in it when we bind ourselves to walking in obedience, faithful to what He gives us, and with intimacy of seeking God with our whole heart–in truth and honest joining (no holding back).

Here is a copy of the letter I sent him. I pray it will speak to you.

Letter to a Son

Dear Son,

God calls people in different ways. He may wish of you a different path than the conventional one. I do caution you to not put too much emphasis on signs. They are easily misinterpreted and misunderstood. God warns us to not put God to the test which we do with some of these. Instead, move forward and ask God to “check”  you if it is not of him. Stop if doubt formulates every time you think on some specific thing, even when it is a good thing.

On the flip side, Satan also causes doubt in order to derail us. The doubt must be figured out, if it is from God or if it is from the Enemy. I am talking in reference to direction and decisions, not about wondering if God will supply the answer.

I have learned that God rarely shows us the future. Instead, he walks with us in the journey and opens the doors when we come to them. If we stay close to the Source, to him, we will be in the center of his divine will, I mean stay really close to him, to where it is an on-going conversation, a relationship, not a one-way, one-sided trajectory.

I am like you, I have thoughts come to me while I am doing my daily tasks. However, they are not always God’s thoughts. Sometimes they are mine even when I’ve requested him to speak to me. It takes time and practice to be able to discern God’s voice even when seeking him intently. I do know, also, that if I have sin in my life, it will block the dialogue and influence the perception.

We have to ask God to reveal our hearts and our wrong thinking. Literally, it can take me an hour to three to get to the place where I know it is God’s voice, not always  but when I am totally serious about something troubling me or an important decision, and still sometimes I don’t get there. It is like I have to pull off the layers of thoughts that crowd in that seem to be God at first. I do ask God if it is him, but not very often. Usually there is a time quotient involved.

Often the answer comes in stages. Many works of God and fulfillment of prayers are answered over years, not days. I now understand this. I used to get impatient. As Treebeard says in The Two Towers, “Now don’t be hasty, Master Meriadoc.” That’s how it works most times. Even the work of God in your life started years ago and is in answer to mine and others’ prayers.

I think of my friend who still prays for you every single day. Not many have a faithful prayer warrior like her. She gets credit in heaven for her faithfulness. I believe God put you into her heart and gave her that desire, a true “God Thing” and just because you remind her of her grandson who has turned away from things of God and that causes her pain.

Another thing I have noticed is this, a restlessness is present when God is wanting a change from me. That has been more true in recent years than in the past. Even in the restlessness, I have to wait, not act, until the time is right. Your future? I do not know, but I do believe you will know when the time is right.

You are to be faithful to the task he has given you to do. See it this way, I will be the best truck driver I can be with God’s enabling as I travel town to town and meet people in every place where I have a truck delivery. If you really want to be daring, surrender your job to him and then see what happens! Ask him to release you from your quietness and to place his words within you when you meet people on your journey.

Start recording the things that are small miracles of God. When you start looking, they start appearing. Small opportunities will happen when you do this. Many little things create big things. I do believe God will stretch you to a greater trust in this process of moving you from one job or occupation to another. He is stretching your faith and growing your godly character. He is creating a new inner person. I see it and believe it. Praise Him! To God be the Glory.

Hope this helps. I’m sharing things with you that have taken me years to learn.

Love you,

Mother

To My Son: A Letter about Life

A Mother’s Heart

My son was visiting me a few years back when we began talking about life, God, and how the two intersect. We were open with each other as we delved in and considered the “whys” of personal belief. We discussed the meaning of life and how it ties to one’s perspective of God, the spiritual–or lack thereof–and the philosophical.

As a followup, I decided to write Son 2 an email letter about my hopes and desires for his life, especially on the spiritual side, and the meaning I derive from this. I wished to challenge him in new ways and to give him something more to contemplate.

I hoped my son would grasp the delightful knowledge that belief, Christianity, and God in one’s life, can be vital, rich, and much, much more than most Christian people know it to be. God is life-giving when he is accessed in open and tender, real relationship.

I share my letter to my son here on my blog for the same reason: to encourage you in your faith walk.

Letter to a Son

My Son,

What would I have my son to be? I would have God to be real to you.

I would have you get away from all that seems meaningful for a moment in order to have an honest and open conversation with God.

I would have you reevaluate the important, the very most important, values in your life. These tie in to your beliefs, why you do what you do.

I would have you to not run, if this is any part of the equation. People often do this when life gets complicated.

I would have you thank God for every grace he has given you and praise him for his mighty work on your behalf.

I would have you humble yourself in the sight of the Lord, to give up the right to your life. This comes first.

I would have you to be everything you are, my beloved child, and everything God wants you to be, as his beloved child.

I would have you to live in freedom. Life, real God-life, has an energy force all of its own. Few Christians seem to tap into it. They live unfulfilled lives of so-so Christian living, far short of the life God offers them.

I wish for you, that you will and can partake of the great flowing grace of God. He must be the focus or it will be a wasted effort.

Most of all, I wish for you to fall in love with the Savior. He loves you so very much.

I love you,

Mom

My son was appreciative. This sparked additional two-way conversations.