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The God-Planned Life
by James McConkey
Published by The Peoples Gospel Hour
Happiness Is Knowing the
Will of God and Doing It
"...created in Christ
Jesus unto good works,
which God hath before
ordained that we should walk in them."
(Ephesians 2:10)
“Created in Christ Jesus” means every child of God is a new creation
of Christ Jesus.
“Unto good works” means every such child of God is created anew in
Christ Jesus for a life of service.
“Which God hath before ordained” means God has laid the plan for
this life of service in Christ Jesus, ages before we came into
existence.
“That we should walk in them.” “Walk” is a practical word. That
means God’s great purpose of service for His children is not a mere
fancy but a practical reality, to be known and lived out in our
present work-a-day life. Therefore, all through this great text runs
the one supreme thought that
1. God Has a Plan For Every Life in Christ Jesus
What a wondrous truth is this, yet how reasonable a one! Shall the
architect draw the plans for his stately palace? Shall the artist
sketch the outlines of his masterpiece? Shall the shipbuilder lay
down the lines for his colossal ship? Yet shall God have no plan for
the immortal soul which He brings into being and puts “in Christ
Jesus”?
Surely He has. Yea, for every cloud that floats across the summer
sky; for every blade of grass that points its tiny spear Heavenward;
for every dewdrop that gleams in the morning sun; for every beam of
light that shoots across the limitless space from sun to earth, God
has a purpose and a plan. How much more, then, for you who are His
own, in Christ Jesus, does God have a perfect, prepared life plan.
And not only so, but –
2. God Has a Plan For Your Life Which No Other Man Can Fulfill
“In all the ages of the ages there never has been and never will be
a man or woman just like me. I am unique. I have no double.”
That is true. No two leaves, no two jewels, no two stars, no two
lives alike. Every life is a fresh thought from God to the world. No
man in all the world can do your work as well as you. And if you do
not find and enter into God’s purpose for your life, there will be
something missing from the glory that would otherwise have been
there.
Every jewel gleams with its own radiance. Every flower distils its
own fragrance. Every Christian has his own particular bit of
Christ’s radiance and Christ’s fragrance which God would pass
through him to others.
Has God given you a particular personality? He has also created a
particular circle of individuals who can be reached and touched by
that personality as by none other in the wide world. Then He shapes
and orders your life so as to bring you into contact with that very
circle.
Just a hair’s breadth of shift in the focus of the telescope, and
some man sees a vision of beauty which before had been all confused
and befogged. So, too, just that grain of individual and personal
variation in your life from every other man’s and someone sees Jesus
Christ with a clearness and beauty he would discern nowhere else.
What a privilege to have one’s own Christ-indwelt personality,
however humble! What a joy to know that God will use it, as He uses
no other for certain individuals susceptible to it as to no other!
In you there is just a bit of change in the angle of the jewel –
and, lo, some man sees the light! In you there is just a trifle of
variation in the mingling of the spices – and, behold, someone
becomes conscious of the fragrance of Christ.
3. A Man May Fail to Enter Into God’s Plan For His Life
Among the curiosities of a little fishing village on the Great Lakes
where we were summering was a pair of captive eagles. They had been
captured when but two weeks old and confined in a large room-like
cage. Year after year the eaglets grew, until they were magnificent
specimens of their kind, stretching six feet from tip to tip of
wings.
One summer when we came back for our usual vacation, the eagles were
missing. Inquiring of the owner as to their disappearance, this
story came to us.
The owner had left the village for a prolonged fishing trip out in
the lake. While he was absent, some mischievous boys opened the door
of the cage and gave the great birds their liberty. At once they
endeavoured to escape. But kept in captivity from their earliest
eaglet days, they had never learned to fly. They seemed to realize
that God had meant them to be more than mere earthlings. After all
these weary years the instinct for the sky and the heavens still
smouldered in their hearts. And most desperately did they strive to
exercise it.
They floundered about upon the village green. They struggled, fell,
and beat their wings in piteous efforts to rise into the airy
freedom of their God-appointed destiny. But all in vain.
One of them, essaying to fly across a small stream, fell helpless
into the water and had to be rescued from drowning. The other, after
a succession of desperate and humiliating failures, managed to
attain to the lower-most limb of a nearby tree. Thence he was shot
to death by the hand of a cruel boy. His mate soon shared the same
hapless fate. And the simple tragedy of their hampered lives came to
an end.
Often since has come to us the tragic lesson of the imprisoned
eagles. God had designed for these kingly birds a noble inheritance
of freedom. It was theirs to pierce in royal flights the very eye of
the midday sun. It was theirs to nest in lofty crags where never
foot of man had trod. It was theirs to break with unwearying pinion
the storms and tempests of mid-heaven. A princely heritage indeed
was theirs.
But the cruelty of man had hopelessly shut them out from it. And
instead of the limitless liberty planned for them had come
captivity, helplessness, humiliation and death. Even these birds of
the air missed God’s great plan for their lives. Much more may the
sons of men.
Is not this the very thing of which Paul speaks when he says, “Work
out your own salvation with fear and trembling. For it is God which
worketh in you both to will and to do of his good pleasure”?
What are these inner voices which, if we heed not, cease? What are
these visions which, if we follow not, fade? What are these
yearnings to be all for Christ which, if we embody not in action,
die? What are they but the living God working in us to will and to
do the life work which He has planned for us from all eternity?
And it is this which you are called upon to “work out.” Work it out
in love. Work it out in daily, faithful ministry. Work it out as God
works in you.
But more than that – you may miss it. You may fall short of God’s
perfect plan for your life. Therefore, work it out with fear and
trembling!
Searching words are these – words of warning, words of tender
admonition. That blessed life of witnessing, service and fruit
bearing which God has planned for you in Christ Jesus from all
eternity – work it out with trembling. Trembling – lest the god of
this world blind you to the vision of service which God is ever
holding before you. Trembling – lest the low standard of life
fellow-Christians about you lead you to drop yours to a like
grovelling level. Trembling – lest some little circle in the dark
ends of the earth should fail of the giving, the praying or the
going which God has long since planned for you. Trembling – lest the
voices of worldly pleasure and ambition dull and deafen your ears to
the one voice which is ever whispering – “Follow thou me: follow
thou me.”
4. One Way of Missing God’s Calling May Be By “Choosing” Our Own
Calling
Every day men talk of “choosing” a calling. But is not the phrase a
sheer misnomer? For how can a man “choose” a “calling”? If a man is
called, he does not choose. It is the one who calls who does the
choosing. “Ye have not chosen me, but I have chosen you, and
ordained you that ye should go and bear fruit,” says our Lord.
Men act as though God threw down before them an assortment of plans
from which they might choose what pleases them, even as a shopkeeper
tosses out a dozens skeins of silk to a lady buyer from which she
might select that which strikes her fancy.
But it is not true. It is God’s to choose. It is ours to simply
ascertain and obey. For next in its eternal moment to the salvation
of the soul is the guidance of the life of a child of God. And God
claims both as His supreme prerogative.
The man who trusts God with one, but wrests from Him the other, is
making a fatal mistake. Would we were taught this ere our unskilled
hand had time to mar the plan! In default of such teaching, let us
confess with humbles hearts the mistakes we have made here, in the
frailty of our mere human judgment.
Young friend, are you standing in that trying place where men are
pressing you to “choose” a calling? Are you about to cast the die of
a self-chosen life work? Do not cast it. Do not try to choose.
Does not the text say we are, “created in Christ Jesus unto good
works”? If the plan is in Christ, how will you find it unless you go
to Christ? Therefore go to God simply, trustfully, prayerfully and
ask Him to show you what He has chosen for you from all eternity.
And as you walk in the daily light which He sheds upon your path, He
will surely lead you into His appointed life plan. So shall you be
saved the sorrow, disappointment and failure which follow in the
wake of him who “chooses” his own path, and, all too late, comes to
himself to find out that it pays to trust God in this great concern
of his life, even as in all others.
5. Every Child of God May Find and Enter Into God’s Plan For His
Life
You remember the story of the engineer of the Brooklyn bridge.
During its building he was injured. For many long months he was shut
up in his room. His gifted wife shared his toils and carried his
plans to the workmen.
At last the great bridge was completed. Then the invalid architect
asked to see it. They put him upon a cot, and carried him to the
bridge. They placed him where he could see the magnificent structure
in all its beauty.
There he lay, in his helplessness, intently scanning the work of his
genius. He marked the great cables, the massive piers, the mighty
anchorages which fettered it to the earth. His critical eye ran over
every beam, every girder, every chord, every rod. He noted every
detail carried out precisely as he had dreamed it in his dreams, and
wrought it out in his plans and specifications.
Then as the joy of achievement filled his soul, as he saw and
realized that it was finished exactly as he had designed it, in an
ecstasy of delight he cried out, “It’s just like the plan! It’s just
like the plan!”
Some day we shall stand in the glory and, looking up into His face,
cry out, “O God, I thank Thee that Thou didst turn me aside from my
wilful and perverse way, to Thy loving and perfect one. I thank Thee
that Thou didst ever lead me to yield my life to Thee. I thank Thee
that as I day by day walked the simple pathway of service. Thou
didst let me gather up one by one the golden threads of Thy great
purpose for my life. I thank Thee, as, like a tiny trail creeping
its way up some great mountainside, that pathway of life has gone on
in darkness and light, storm and shadow, weakness and tears,
failures and falterings, Thou hast at last brought me to its
destined end. And now that I see my finished life, no longer
‘through a glass darkly’ but in the face to face splendour of Thine
own glory, I thank Thee, O God, I thank Thee that it’s just like the
plan; it’s just like the plan.”
Then, too, while we do need to walk carefully and earnestly that we
miss not God’s great will for us, yet let us not be anxious lest,
because we are so human, so frail, so fallible, we may make some
mistakes in the details and specifications of that plan. We will do
well to remember this. God has a beautiful way of overruling
mistakes when the heart is right with Him. That is the supreme
essential. The one attitude of ours which can mar His purpose of
love for our lives is the refusal to yield that life and will to His
own great will of love for it. But when that life is honestly
yielded, then the mistakes in the pathway which spring from our own
human infirmities and fallibleness will be sweetly and blessedly
corrected by God, as we move along that path.
It is like guiding a ship. Our trembling hand upon the wheel may
cause trifling wanderings from her course. But they seem greater to
us than they are in reality. And if we but hold our craft steadily
to the polestar of God’s will as best we know it, she will reach her
destined port with certainty, notwithstanding the swervings that
have befallen her in the progress of her voyage.
6. How Shall I Ascertain God’s Plan For My Life?
But now we come face to face with a question of supreme importance,
and that is this: “How shall I ascertain God’s plan for my life? How
shall I be safeguarded from error? How shall I discern the guidance
of God from the misguidance of my own fleshly desires and ambitions?
How shall I find the path in which He is calling me to walk?” We
answer first:
Believe
The trouble with most of us is that we do not believe God has such a
life plan for us. We take our own way; we lay our own plans; we
choose our own profession; we decide upon our own business without
taking God into account at all. According to our faith is it unto
us. And if we have no faith in God’s Word in this regard, what else
can we expect but to miss God’s way for our lives, and only come
back to it after long and costly wanderings from his blessed, chosen
pathway for us? Ephesians 2:10 is as surely inspired as Ephesians
2:8. The promise of a life plan is as explicit in the one as the
promise of salvation is in the other. Brood over this Ephesian
verse. Is it plain? Is it God’s Word? Does it not say clearly that
God has a life plan for you in Christ Jesus? Then settle down upon
it. Believe it with your whole soul. Do not be shaken from it. Again
–
Pray
Dr. Henry Foster, founder of the Clifton Springs sanitarium, was a
man of marvellous power with God. A man, too, of great insight into
the mind and ways of God in the matter of guidance in the affairs of
life. What was the secret of that wondrous power and wisdom?
Visitors were wont to ask this question of one of the older
physicians on the staff of that great institution. And this was his
response.
He took the visitor by the arm. He led him upstairs to the door of
Dr. Foster’s office. He led him into this little chamber, across to
the corner of the room. There, kneeling, he lifted up the border of
a rug and showed to the visitor two ragged holes in the carpet, worn
by the knees of God’s saint in his life of prayer. “That, sir, was
the secret of Henry Foster’s power and wisdom in the things of God
and men.”
Friend, when your bedroom carpet begins to wear out after that
fashion, the man who lives in that room need not have any fear about
missing God’s life plan. For that is the open secret of wisdom and
guidance in the life of every man who knows anything about walking
with God.
Does any man lack wisdom? “Let him ask of God,” (James 1:5). Are you
one of the men who lack wisdom concerning God’s plan for their
lives? Then ask of God. Pray! Pray trustfully, pray steadily, pray
expectantly, and God will certainly guide you into that blessed
place where you will be as sure you are in His chosen pathway as you
are of your salvation.
Will
Will what? Will to do God’s will for your life, instead of your own.
Do not launch out upon the sea of life headed for a port of your own
choosing, guided by a chart of your own drafting, driven by the
power of your own selfish pleasures or ambitions. Come to God. Yield
your life to Him by one act of trustful, irrevocable surrender. And
then begin to choose to do His will for your life instead of your
own. So shall you come steadily to know and see God’s will for that
life.
Our Lord Jesus clearly said this: “If any man will to do my will, he
shall know.” Without a shadow of doubt, we will begin to know God’s
will as soon as we begin to choose His will for our lives instead of
our own.
Thus the spiritual field-glasses through which we come to see God’s
will for our lives are double-barrelled. Side by side are two
lenses. The one – “I trust.” The other – “I will.” When a man can
hold both of these to his eyes, he will see God’s will with
unclouded clearness.
But suppose a man says to God, “I doubt.” Then a veil falls over
that lens of faith. And suppose he says, “I will not.” Then the veil
falls over the other, the lens of the will, of choice. Straightway
that man’s spiritual vision is in eclipse. He walks in a darkness of
his own making, springing from his own unfaith and self will, yet
the source and cause of which he, in his blindness, wholly fails to
perceive.
Friend, are you walking in such darkness? Do you say, there is such
a veil between you and the will of God for your life? Listen. Begin
to believe in God’s plan for your life. That veil will become
translucent. Begin to will to do God’s will. That veil will become
transparent. Begin day by day, actually to do God’s will. That veil
will vanish! And when it is gone, and you are walking in the full
light of God’s will for your life, you will see that it was
self-will alone which shut out the clear vision of God’s will. For
no man can see the will of God save through these two crystal lenses
– the trustful heart, and the yielded will.
Does someone say at this point, “But suppose I have given my life to
God to enter into His will for it. What changes shall I make in it?
Shall I seek a new environment, a new sphere? What shall I do?” We
answer –
Stay Where You Are, and Do the Next Thing
Talk God’s plan and consecration to it to Christian men and
straightway many of them think you mean them to give up their
business and head at once for the pulpit or the foreign missionary
field. To come into God’s plan is to go into some other place, as
they view it.
But there never was a greater mistake. Consecration is not
necessarily dis-location. Not by any means. God’s plan for a man’s
life does not of necessity lift him out from his present realm of
life and surroundings. It is not a new sphere God is seeking. It is
a new man in the present sphere! It is not transference; it is
transformation. The trouble is not usually with the place; it is
with the man in the place. And when a man consecrates his life to
God to find and enter into God’s perfect plan for that life, God
will usually keep him right where he is, but living for God and His
kingdom instead of living for self. So until God shows you
differently, stay where you are and live for God.
If God Wants You Elsewhere, He Will Lead You There; Be Sure to
Follow
We have seen that consecration is not necessarily dis-location. Yet
it may be. God usually keeps a man where he is, when he yields his
life to Him, yet not always. God may lift you clear out from the
sphere in which you are moving. God may completely change your
environment, as well as change you. God may take you out of your
business or profession and send you to the uttermost parts of the
earth as a chosen messenger of His.
But how will this come about? As you do the next thing. The golden
chain of God’s great purpose for your life and mine is woven of the
single links which we lay hold of, one at a time, along the pathway
of daily opportunity. By and by, when we have gathered enough links,
the chain begins to appear. The man who faithfully picks up the
links need never fear about missing the chain. Therefore, do the
next thing. As you do it this thread of daily service becomes in
God’s hands like the clue to a maze. By it God leads you on in your
pathway until you are out from all the labyrinth of darkness and
uncertainty, into the clear shining of His will for your life.
Therefore, do it patiently, faithfully, lovingly.
Teach the class, visit the sick, comfort the sorrowing, preach the
Word, use the tract and leaflet, witness for Him just where you are.
And as you thus serve, if God wants you elsewhere, He will surely
lead you there. Only do you be sure to follow. And thus following,
some of us will land in China, India, Africa. And some of us will
abide just where we are. But all of us will be where He wants us,
and that is, in the plan.
“Ah,” says someone, “this is all very well for the young and the
strong who have all of life before them. But it is too late for me.
My life has been full of blunders and failures. It is only after
years of wandering that I have come to Christ. There is naught left
for me but the memory of mistakes and the fragments of a vanished
and broken life.”
Listen, friend, to this truth as we part tonight:
God is the only one who can take a seemingly shattered life and make
a beautiful life from the fragments.
Have you ever heard this story?
In a certain old town was a great cathedral. And in that cathedral
was a wondrous stained-glass window. Its fame had gone abroad over
the land. From miles around people pilgramaged to gaze upon the
splendour of this masterpiece of art.
One day there came a great storm. The violence of the tempest forced
in the window; and it crashed to the marble floor, shattered into a
hundred pieces. Great was the grief of the people at the catastrophe
which had suddenly bereft the town of its proudest work of art. They
gathered up the fragments, huddled them in a box, and carried them
to the cellar of the church.
One day there came along a stranger and craved permission to see the
beautiful window. They told him of its fate. When he asked what they
had done with the fragments, they took him to the vault and showed
him the broken morsels of glass. “Would you mind giving these to
me?” asked the stranger. “Take them along,” was the reply, “they are
no longer of any use to us.” The visitor carefully lifted the box
and carried it away in his arms.
Weeks passed by; then one day there came an invitation to the
custodians of the cathedral. It was from a famous artist, noted for
his master skill in glass-craft. It summoned them to his study to
inspect a stained-glass window, the work of his genius.
Ushering them into his studio he stood them before a great veil of
canvas. At the touch of his hand upon a cord the canvas dropped. And
there before their astonished gaze shone a stained-glass window
surpassing in beauty all their eyes had ever beheld.
As they gazed entranced upon its rich tints, wondrous pattern, and
cunning workmanship, the artist turned and said, “This window I have
wrought from the fragments of your shattered one, and it is now
ready to be replaced.”
Once more a great window shed its beauteous light into the dim
aisles of the old cathedral. But the splendour of the new far
surpassed the glory of the old, and the fame of its strange
fashioning filled the land.
Reader, do you say that your plans have been crushed? Thank God and
take heart. Have you not long since learned that the best place for
many of your plans is the trash pile? And that often you must fling
them there before your blinded eyes can see God’s own better plan
for your life?
And how is it with your life? Has sin blighted it? Have mistakes of
early years seemingly wrecked it? Have joy and sweetness vanished
from it? Does there seem nought left for you but to walk its weary
treadmill until its days of darkness and drudgery shall end? Then
know this: Jesus Christ is a matchless life mender. Try Him. He will
take that seemingly shattered life and fashion a far more beautiful
one from its fragments than you yourself could ever have wrought
from the whole. In Him your weary soul shall find its longed-for
rest. And the fragments that remain of God’s heritage of life to you
shall mean, in gladsome days to come, more than all the vanished
years that are crooning their sad lament in your innermost soul
tonight.
Why do I drift on a storm-tossed sea,
With neither compass, nor star, nor chart,
When, as I drift, God’s own plan for me
Waits at the door of my slow-trusting-heart?
Down from the heavens it drops like a scroll,
Each day a bit will the Master unroll,
Each day a mite of the veil will He lift,
Why do I falter? Why wander, and drift?
Drifting, while God’s at the helm to steer;
Groping, when God lays the course, so clear;
Swerving, though straight into port I might sail;
Wrecking, when heaven lies just within hail.
Help me, O God, in the plan to believe:
Help me my fragment each day to receive,
Oh, that my will may with Thine have no strife!
God-yielded wills find the God-planned life.
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