Divine Guidance
Categories
of the will of God
I. The operational will of God: What does He
want me to do?
a) This is the same for every
believer.
b) The believer is to be filled with the Spirit, use
GAP in its six stages, thus building the edification
structure in the soul.
c) Corresponds with principle #2, yieldedness (Fullness of the Holy
Spirit)
d) Specifics (Divine operating assets) in the will
of god (operational will): All given by grace:
1. Canon
2. Local church
3. Pastor-teacher,
evangelist, other spiritual gifts
4. Indwelling Holy
Spirit.
5. Rebound
6. Breathing apparatus
of the soul
7. The mind
8. The human spirit
9. The priesthood
Also:
1. Faith-rest technique
2. Living in the Word
3. Occupation with
Christ
4. Prayer
5. Witnessing, etc.
II.
The viewpoint will of God: What does He want me to think?
a) This is the same for every
believer.
b) His viewpoint is what we think.
Divine viewpoint.
c) Divine viewpoint comes from e)pignwsij in the human spirit.
d) Corresponds with principle # 1:
Knowledge (e)pignwsij).
e) With e)pignwsij in the human spirit comes growth (maturity), the erection of the
edification complex (ECS).
III.
Geographical will of God: Where does He want me to go?
a) This is different for each
believer (except married couples)
b) Is there a specific area of
service for this specific time?
c) The issue: If you are filled with
the Holy Spirit, and respect the authority of the communicator, comprehend the gnwsij, transfer to the human spirit which makes a frame
of reference (e)pignwsij) plus exhaling and the ECS — you’ll have no problem with geography.
The Mechanics of Divine
Guidance
I.
Introduction: Acts 11:1-16
a) Verse 1 — Peter received the news
of the Gentile Pentecost.
b) Verse 2 — Followed by the
inevitable opposition from legalism.
c) Verse 3 — There is criticism of
Peter so Peter begins to relate various factors in God’s leading as he came
into contact with the Gentiles in the house of Cornelius.
II.
Mechanics of Guidance:
a) Guidance through prayer: Guidance
through prayer is authentic only when a believer is confronted with a situation
which is not specified by some direct command in scripture — verse 5.
Example: A believer should never
pray about marrying an unbeliever. 2 Corinthians 6:14 commands no marriage is
to be contracted between a believer and an unbeliever. However the believer
should use prayer in the doctrine of right man and right woman. Hebrew 4:16.
Guidance is used in a specific instance by prayer and other divine operating
assets.
b) Guidance through the mind — verse
6.
“I considered.” To put your mind
down on something. Objective thinking, excludes emotion. To ponder it
carefully. Scar-tissued, subjective thinking gums the works.
God always leads in compliance with
His Word. God never leads contrary to the Word. Basically guidance comes
through the Word, but the Word must be in the human spirit in order to be
applied, for only doctrine in the human spirit can be applied.
The Word comes into the mind as a
staging area — so this second stage is GAP and is very necessary, but
don’t stop there.
c) Guidance through the Word of God
— verses 7-10.
Peter
was guided through divine revelation, which today is the Word of God and only
the Word of God.
d) Guidance through Providential
Circumstances — verse 11.
Three
men had arrived even while Peter was still on the rooftop. They had left
Caesarea some time before and had made the day’s journey to Joppa, and to the
house. This was providential circumstances.
We are to test a providential
circumstance. It must not conflict with the statements, doctrines, and
principles of the Word of God.
Hanging out the fleeces today is OUT! We don’t need fleeces, we need the Word of God, and the resultant
erection of the ECS. It is a sign of lack of
truth and stupidity when we hang out fleeces. Gideon (Judges 6:36-40) was a
pitiful believer — and the only reason God honoured that fleece was His
marvellous and matchless grace.
e) Guidance through the Holy Spirit
— verse 12.
The Holy Spirit never guides the
believer apart from the Word of God. The Holy Spirit cannot guide apart from
the filling of the Holy Spirit and knowledge of doctrine.
i. v.7: “hearing the
voice” — Word.
ii. v.5: “seeing the vision” — Canon.
iii. v.12: “Spirit bade me go” — teaching ministry of
the Holy Spirit.
f) Guidance through Comparison —
verse 13-15.
The parallel phenomenon of Pentecost
in Jerusalem confirmed the fact that Gentile believers were just as much
“Church” (body of Christ) as Jewish believers. Ephesians 2:14.
g) Guidance through Scripture Memory
— verse 16.
Peter remembered what Jesus spoke in
Acts 1:5. The memory of scripture contributed considerably to his guidance.
Peter remembered it at the proper time, and therefore was guided by it.
Divine Guidance: Moses’ Decision
1. “By faith Moses when he was come
to years (40 years of age).”
In
making a decision the believer must be in fellowship, exercising the faith-rest
technique.
2. “Refused to be called.”
Moses
exercised his volition to refuse.
3. “Choosing rather to suffer
affliction ...”
The
will of God eliminates one thing … and enables to choose another.
4. “Esteeming the reproach of
Christ.”
Think
the matter through using divine viewpoint! Select pertinent doctrines and
apply.
5. “For he had respect unto the
recompense of the reward.”
He
made the decision with eternity’s values in view!
Divine Guidance: Principle
I.
Knowledge of the will of God — Romans 12:2.
(Knowledge can be head knowledge (gnwsij) or full knowledge (e)pignwsij). Both are necessary — fact goes into the nouj
(mind), and then faith transfers the fact into usable knowledge in the human
spirit. Romans 12:1-2, “renewing of your mind” is the recycling of e)pignwsij through the facets of the soul.
a) Many things are stated directly
to be God’s will:
i. 2 Corinthians 6:14, “
… be not unequally yoked together with unbelievers,” for example.
ii. Other things are not directly stated and must be
determined by deduction from known doctrine.
b) There is no guidance for the
believer apart from knowledge of the Word and the filling of the Holy Spirit.
II.
Yieldedness to the Will of God — Romans 6:13; 12:1.
a) Yielding is not a one-shot
experience:
i. A person in the
bottom circle (in fellowship) is yielded. Out of fellowship he is not yielded.
ii. The practice of being yielded is 1 John 1:9 —
Confess.
b) Command: Romans 12:1, “present,”
aorist tense. This is using 1 John 1:9 in the point that it is needed.
c) The principle of yieldedness is
found in Romans 6:13.
d) The mechanics of yieldedness is
the use of 1 John 1:9.
e) Definition: Being willing to do
the will of God before you know what the will of God is.
III.
Guidance through spiritual growth.
a) Command: 2 Peter 3:18, “But grow in
grace and in the knowledge of our Lord and saviour Jesus Christ.” Grace is the
sum total of the plan of God.
b) A full knowledge (residual
doctrine, foundation of the ECS) is acquired through the
daily intake of the Word and GAP (grace apparatus for perception).
This results in maturity.
c) Divine guidance involves one step
at a time. Each step must be growth and advance.
IV.
There are three hindrances to doing the will of God:
Ignorance, carnality, and lack of
growth — lack of an edification complex of the soul.
Seven Things Declared to be
the Will of God
1. It is the will of God that every
member of the human race be born again — 2 Peter 3:9, “… not willing that any
should perish.” 1 John 2:17 with 1 John 3:23.
2. It is the will of God that all
believers be sanctified. (We are speaking here of experiential sanctification
which is staying in fellowship) 1
Thessalonians 4:13 carries the idea that a believer is to be set apart unto God
by being in fellowship with Him so that believers will be under His direction.
3. It is the will of God that all
believers be controlled (filled) with the Holy Spirit — Ephesians 5:18.
4. It is the will of god that we
give thanks in everything: 1
Thessalonians 5:18 correlated with Romans 8:28. If you are going to do the will
of God, if you are going to be guided by God, this must be your mental
attitude. Suffering is designed to bless us, therefore I can give thanks in
suffering. Discipline is designed to remind us to use 1 John 1:9.
5. It is the will of god that
believers suffer — 1 Peter 3:17. Since it is God’s will that you suffer (1
Peter 4:19) then the purpose of suffering is blessing. Suffering is:
i. God’s way of blessing
the believer.
ii. God’s way of bringing maturity (edification complex)
in a quicker way.
iii. God’s way of directing our
attention to the things that are really important in life such as: Fellowship
with Him; Knowing doctrine.
6. It is the will of God for every
believer to trust the Lord. Proverbs 3:5,6, “Trust in the Lord with all thine
heart (mind) and lean not unto thine own understanding (human viewpoint); in
all thy ways acknowledge Him and He shall direct thy paths.”
7. It is the will of God for every
believer to be productive — 1 Peter 2:15. All production is in the area of
divine good: the filling of the Spirit, the exhale of e)pignwsij, and the erection of the edification complex. This
is triple compound divine good.
Types of the Will of God
1. The directive will of God:
Tantamount to the sovereign will of God. His choice for your life.
2. The permissive will of God: Where
negative volition in man is permitted to act contrary to the will of God. Man
goes negative against His directive will. +R (absolute righteousness) says God
cannot coerce man. Justice disciplines man.
3. The overruling will of God:
Supersedes the directive and permissive will of God, and involves the
frustration of Satan’s will. God controls the circumstances but does not
interfere with the operation of one’s volition, like Jonah. God takes every
situation in the life of the believer and makes it work together for the
believer’s good.
4. Illustrations:
a) Illustration No 1: 2
Corinthians 6:14.
i. Directive will: Do
not marry an unbeliever. Sovereign will.
ii. Permissive will: Marry one anyway, resulting in
misery and divine discipline.
b) Illustration No 2: 1
John 3:23a.
i. That all be saved, 2
Peter 3:9. Sovereign will of God.
ii. Permissive will: God will not overrule volition
because of +R. Justice must condemn the negative signals (-V). Note the last
judgment for unbelievers.
c) Illustration No 3: 1
John 3:23b; Ephesians 5:17,18.
i. Directive will: That
every believer be filled with the Holy Spirit. Sovereign will.
ii. Permissive will: Every believer is not filled with
the Holy Spirit (+R does not interfere), however Justice executes divine
discipline.
d) Illustration No 4:
Balaam, Numbers 22:12-31:8.
i. Directive will:
a. Thou shalt not go
(depends upon human viewpoint)
b. Thou shalt not curse
(cursing depends upon Satanic or demon influence)
ii. Permissive will: God
permitted Balaam to go, did not coerce volition.
iii. Overruling will:
God overruled because it involved demons, and involved the cursing of Israel.
God protects His people from Satanic action.