Where is God in Your Future?
What if the most important part of your plans isn’t what you’ve decided—but whether you’ve left room for God to lead?
Guest (Female): Take a break from your busy schedule and join Harold Sala for Guidelines for Living.
Harold Sala: Wise is the person who thinks ahead and plans for the future, right? But at what point does planning become presumptuous? Suppose you're in business and business has been good. Your warehouses are overflowing. Wouldn't it make sense to enlarge?
Here's another scenario. You're a farmer and your barns are bulging with a harvest of crops, so you say, "Okay, this is what I'll do. I'll tear down my barns and build larger ones, and there I will store all my grain and my goods." It makes sense, right? Not necessarily. Jesus told of such a person and he said of this one, "You fool! This very night your life will be demanded of you."
Planning becomes presumption when you leave God out of your future. You arrogantly forget how fragile life really is. Now, when God calls someone a fool, it is a serious situation. Here is how James, the half-brother of Jesus, viewed it. He wrote, "Now listen, you who say, 'Today or tomorrow we will go to this or that city, spend a year there, carry on business and make money.' Why, you don't even know what will happen tomorrow."
"What is your life?" he asked. "You are a mist that appears for a little while and then vanishes. Instead, you ought to say, 'If it is the Lord's will, we will live and do this or that.' As it is, you boast and brag. All such boasting is evil."
The year was 1902 and Queen Victoria's magnificent reign had come to a close. Her eldest son, Prince Edward, was to be crowned in her stead. For centuries, it had been the custom to invite royalty and dignitaries to a coronation, the invitation of which traditionally contained a Latin phrase *Deo volente*, or abbreviated DV.
And what is the significance of *Deo volente*? In Latin, it means "God willing." However, the invitations that went out from Buckingham Palace announced the coronation of Prince Edward, who was to become King Edward VII, omitting the phrase *Deo volente*. After all, thought some, why should we who are enlightened continue to use that phrase *Deo volente* on official invitations? We are the ones who make this decision, they reasoned, not God. So, let's get on with the coronation.
But as the Scottish poet Robert Burns suggested, the best-laid plans of mice and men often go awry. And the coronation scheduled for Westminster Abbey didn't take place according to the invitation because Prince Edward was felled with appendicitis and for months was confined to his bed. Following that event, protocol reverted back to include the phrase *Deo volente*.
When you include the phrase "Lord willing" or "God willing" in your comments about what you intend to do, you recognize that God does have a will and that you have given thought to how His will affects your life. Now, this is not to suggest for a minute that God rules as a dictator, disallowing anything He doesn't like.
To the contrary, much of what happens today is not the will of God because it clearly violates the revealed direction God has given to us in the pages of the Bible. But recognizing God does have a will and that your plans would not presume defiance of that will is a mark of wisdom.
The next time you're invited to a coronation at Buckingham Palace, should you be so honored, notice that the Latin phrase *Deo volente* is still found amidst the golden engraving and realize that in the affairs of both royalty and commoners, God raises one up and sets another aside. He has a will, and ultimately His will shall be done in both heaven and earth. Of that you can be certain.
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About Guidelines For Living
Start your day with hope, confidence, and purpose by listening to the Guidelines for Living daily devotional with Harold Sala! This 5-minute program offers insightful teaching from God’s Word and practical application for living out your faith in the day-to-day. Strengthen your relationship with Jesus by adding this short devotional to your daily routine. Guidelines for Living is the longest running five-minute program in Christian radio!
About Harold Sala
Speaker, author and Bible teacher, Dr. Harold Sala founded Guidelines in 1963 and pioneered the first 5-minute Christian program on radio. Dr. Sala holds a Ph.D. in biblical text and has taught at conferences, seminars and churches the world over. An author of over 60 books published in 19 languages, his most recent release is 40 Unstoppable Women (Rose Publishing).
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