Friday, 05 September 2008

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    Great River Road
    By Jason Upton
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    The Best Road

    My long-time readers know that the best way to get a post out of me is for somebody to ask me a really good thoughtful question.  That hasn’t happened as much lately as it used to, but the other day, I got a message from one of my new readers. She has run up against one of the deep questions of the Christian life.

    According to the Bible, God cares for us and promises to guide our lives in the best way.  “God loves you and has a wonderful plan for your life,” as the classic evangelistic booklet puts it.  “He promises to direct us to the best road,” as my friend puts it more poetically.  

    But if that’s true, my friend asks, why does life have so many difficulties?  Why do many people’s lives seem to have more difficulties after they choose to trust in God and His wonderful plan?  Why does it seem like He doesn’t answer when we pray—especially when we ask Him this question?

    Let’s face it:  If God’s “wonderful plan” is for people who believe in Him to be free from suffering, difficulties, and obstacles on the road of life, then He doesn’t do a very good job at it.  Christians suffer just as much as anybody else.  We still have bad days at work.  We still have to worry about money.  We still get sick and injured.  (“If you prick us, do we not bleed?”)  We experience tragedies and natural disasters.  Our loved ones die.  On top of that, we sometimes face persecution, harassment, or even martyrdom just because we believe in Jesus.  That’s not very wonderful.

    If you think that sounds too shallow, consider this: I once saw an anti-God website where it was argued that God doesn’t exist because (and they were completely serious) “Christians are no more successful than anybody else when they gamble in Las Vegas.”  Clearly, if we have the wrong idea of what God’s plan is and how He works it out, we’ll come to some very wrong conclusions about Him!

    So the question is this: If God loves us and has a wonderful plan for our lives, then what is that plan, and how wonderful is it really?

    Let’s look at the Bible.  A popular Bible verse (maybe you can even quote it from memory) tells us this:

    “And we know that all things work together for good to those who love God, to those who are called according to His purpose.” –Romans 8:28

    That’s a nice thought—everything, even the not-so-good things, work to create good in the end when we trust in God.  But how do we know that’s true?  There’s a hint at the end of the verse: “according to His purpose.” For everything that God allows to happen to us, He has a purpose in mind.  The problem is that too often we just learn this verse by itself, and don’t keep reading to find out what “His purpose” is.   The next verse makes it very clear:

    “For whom He foreknew, He also predestined to be conformed to the image of His Son, that He might be the firstborn among many brethren.” –Romans 8:29

    Let’s look at this carefully: “Whom He foreknew” refers to the people who love God, mentioned in verse 28.  God knew long before you were around that you would choose to believe in Him.  “He also predestined”—that’s a fancy theological word meaning “planned, and what God plans always happens.”  (For those familiar with the theological debate about the doctrine of election: that’s not what Paul is talking about in this verse.)  God knew you were going to commit your life to Him, so He came up with a plan for it, a destiny, a final stop at the end of the road He sets for you.  What is this plan that God predestined for you?  The Bible spells it out in nine simple words:

    “To be conformed to the image of His Son.”

    God’s wonderful plan for your life is that, when you trust him, you will be changed to look exactly like Jesus.  All the love, all the grace, all the truth, all the kindness, all the wisdom that Jesus had, you will have.  In fact, Jesus can fairly be called “the firstborn among many brethren”—He is the only begotten Son of God, but He now has a lot of younger brothers and sisters by adoption, and there is a strong family resemblance.

    If God’s plan is to make our lives look like Jesus’ life, what does that mean for us?  The tremendously encouraging Bible teacher Ron Hutchcraft puts it in these words, which I really can’t improve on:

    I have been to the gift shop at those Colonial villages and I’ve seen what the potter can make out of a blob of clay. Every squeeze, every poke, every spin, every cooking is to turn the clay from a blob into a masterpiece. We’re God’s clay. The mold is Jesus. And God designed you to be, through the uniqueness of your own personality and gifts, a replica of His Son.

    One of life’s most frequently asked questions is, “Why, God?” The only answer that fits all situations is this—“This can make you more like Jesus than you’ve ever been.” What happens in your life is either something your Father sends or He allows. But in either case, He only allows into your life what can make you more valuable, more Christ-like.

    You can’t learn to love like Jesus unless there’s someone in your life who’s hard to love; you can’t learn His sensitivity without hurting; you can’t be Jesus-patient without having to wait, or to put up with someone difficult; you can’t learn joy without circumstances that you have to rise above; you can’t learn peace without some pressure; you can’t learn faith without needs that are bigger than your ability to meet them.

    But unlike clay, you choose whether the Potter’s beautiful intentions are realized. If you forget the Potter’s goal, you can become desperate, bitter, hard, self-absorbed. Or you can let Him use it for the ultimate good. If you’re going to get the pain, you might as well get the point! And that’s to make you more like Jesus. The oven and the wheel are God’s tools to transform us blobs of clay into His masterpieces!

    The Oven, the Wheel, and the Masterpiece

    I’ve seen this in my own life as well. Ironically, the things I’ve liked the least turned out to be the things that helped me become the most like Jesus.  That rotten customer service job was where I learned how to love my neighbor as myself.  That horrible summer when I was alienated from all my Christian friends and coworkers was when I first fully appreciated how much Jesus went through for me.  If I hadn’t gone to that emotionally abusive church, I might not have learned how to pray for the people who despitefully use me.  If I hadn’t been picked on by bullies in grade school, I wouldn’t have had to forgive my enemies.  If I never had to wonder where my next paycheck was coming from, I would never have learned to trust God to provide.  And so on.

    I wouldn’t have chosen to experience those things, and I hated them at the time.  Yet looking back, I’m glad that God guided me into them.  At the time, I asked God why He would let such terrible things happen to me if He loved me.  Now, I realize that the answer is He let those things happen because He loved me.

    George MacDonald makes a bold statement in one of his novels:

    Yet I know that good is coming to me—that good is always coming; though few have at all times the simplicity and the courage to believe it. What we call evil, is the only and best shape, which, for the person and his condition at the time, could be assumed by the best good. (Phantastes, ch. 25)

    It’s a bit shocking the way it’s phrased there, but I think he’s on to something.  It’s not that evil is a good thing, but that when God allows evil to happen, He allows it only for a good reason—the best possible reason, in fact.  God causes all things, even evil ones, to work together for good, for the purpose of making you more like His Son.

    So God does care, and when you trust Him, God will always direct you down the best road.  Not necessarily the happiest road, the smoothest road, or the easiest road, but the road that will lead you to the best thing: becoming more and more like Jesus every day.

Comments (15)

  • Good passage!thx for sharing...but i still have a minor question...why we need to become more and more like jesus?is it good to be like that?and what is the definition of good?

  • yes. I think, in our limited, human understanding of what love is,
    we think that because God loves us that he foremost desires us to be
    happy. and that's not his first priority. his first priority is for us
    to be holy, and sometimes that means we won't be happy. at all.

  • I couldn't agree more! I have been asked if I find being Christian oppressive, and I always answer no, it frees me. All of the trials and every moment that I'm miserable I wouldn't give up, because God is giving me the opportunity to become better. I come out of every hardship with more understanding, and happier than I was before- happier because I can see the changes the hard times wrought. I thank God for loving me enough to teach me, to nuture me, and to show me the way to become more like Jesus, even if I'm not so thrilled about having it tough. He doesn't want to cuddle and love us and make us safe- He wants to mold us, shape us, and put us on the path to always become better, to become more than what we were. And, in my opinion, that very fact brings me so much joy- even if I'm unhappy sometimes, there is a joy and wonder and gratefulness that lurks underneath it all. And sometimes it just bubbles to the surface, and I just can't contain that joy anymore. God is amazing.

  • One of life’s most frequently asked
    questions is, “Why, God?” The only answer that fits all situations is this—“This
    can make you more like Jesus than you’ve ever been.”


    God never told Job why he allowed him to suffer and in fact rebuked Job for even questioning him and not totally trusting him. God's answer to Job's why and complaining:

    Where were you when I laid the foundations of the world? And God kept asking Job questions to where Job was speechless and couldn't answer God back.

  • You can’t learn to love like Jesus
    unless there’s someone in your life who’s hard to love; you can’t learn His
    sensitivity without hurting; you can’t be Jesus-patient without having to wait,
    or to put up with someone difficult; you can’t learn joy without circumstances
    that you have to rise above; you can’t learn peace without some pressure; you
    can’t learn faith without needs that are bigger than your ability to meet them.

    That's my favourite paragraph.

    Also, I must add that our definition of "evil" or "bad" may not be how God views them. For example, we may think that whatever we're going through now is "horrible", but that is how we see it. God doesn't because He sees everything. So I think it's good that if we can try to think like God, and not have so much of our own minds.

  • Whew!  This said a LOT.  Thanks!

  • I think sometimes people forget that happiness is less important than freedom. And if Christianity makes you free, more power to you. But it definitely was not created to make people happy.


    Great post.

  • I agree with the first commenter...is it good to be like Jesus?  I mean it sounds kinda nice to feel an urge to pray for people, but gosh, I wonder if its worth it to have to be spitefully used by people at my church in order to feel that way.  Think I'd rather forgo the bully treatment and risk not having to pray for my enemies.  I really want love...and yeah, I guess I don't mind giving it out (and that sounds like an upside of being like Jesus), but only if I get the love I need.  Does that sound selfish?

    Honestly, where's the good news?  It doesn't feel very tangible.  I feel like I'm being told that I just need to reset my expectations to enjoy "His purpose."  Am I misreading?

  • @god_stories - Stay tuned: I'm working on a follow-up post to address this very question.  It should be out within the next few days or so if all goes well.  Thanks for your comment; it puts the issue in a bit more perspective for me.

  •   Thanks for responding to my comment.  As you may have picked up from my blog I do think there's tons of upside to following Jesus...look forward to reading your perspective!

    Praise the living God!

  • Excellent post.

    I do believe that things happen that are not the best. For instance, I had a very unhappy childhood. I don't believe that, even from God's perspective, that is the original best. However, knowing that it would happen (because of free will), I believe God made it into the best. Is that totally off-base? I do not buy the idea that God ever wants something evil (sin-based) to happen. For instance, child abuse is not "in God's plan." However, God knows what will happen, and He allows it and uses it for His purposes. He makes it the best even thought on its own it isn't.

    I also believe that when we say that hard things will come our way, we often implicitly include the concept that we have to live with ongoing emotional pain. I don't believe this. Hard things will come; I definitely agree. However, if we study the life of Jesus, He didn't hang onto grief and pain. He had perfect peace in in His Father. I believe we are meant to be joyful and at peace. If we are dealing with ongoing emotional pain, God wants to take it from us. Many of us retain crippling pain that we think is just our cross to bear. I used to think this, but now I know from experience that it isn't true. God's goal for us is to be like Jesus-perfectly joyful and peaceful in the love of God. Sometimes people (not you) seem to think that it's wrong to be happy if you're a Christian. I disagree. I believe God is happy, and we're meant to be like Him. Of course pain will come, but it's not meant to tie us down and keep us prisoner of negative emotions.

  • Ask A thoughtful question? I'll consider that a challenge.

  • I like your entry. Very in depth.


    I have to admit though, Im loosing faith in God. There is so much I do not understand. I doubt I ever will.

  • @god_stories - The response is now posted here, if you're interested.

  • @Hitotsu - Thanks for subscribing!  Of course we can't possibly understand everything about God; He's infinite after all.  But if I can help you with something you're wondering about, feel free to ask.

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