When John Wesley was thirty-two years old, he was a bachelor missionary in the colony of Georgia. While he was serving a church in Savannah, he met a young woman named Sophia Christian Hopkey. She was pretty and intelligent, and Wesley fell head over heels in love with her. But Wesley belonged to a group called the Holy club, and one of their ideals was that members should remain single. So Wesley was caught in a dilemma. Was it the will of God for him to marry Sophie or not? To find out, he and a friend named Charles Delamotte decided to draw lots. On three pieces of paper they wrote: “Marry”; “Think not of it this year”; and “Think of it no more.” Then they put the pieces in a container. Delamotte closed his eyes and drew out the third one, “Think of it no more.” Wesley was heartbroken, but he took the result to be the will of God. He ended the courtship, and, not long after, he sailed back to England. In his journal, he wrote over the record of his romance, “Snatched as a brand out of the fire.”
Shortly after this return to England, Wesley came to saving faith in the Lord Jesus, and he began the evangelistic ministry, which God used so greatly. During his travels, he fell in love with another woman, a widow and a Bible class teacher named Grace Murray. This time he tried a different approach to finding the will of God about marriage. He listed seven factors he desired in a wife---her roles as “Housekeeper, Nurse, Companion, Friend, and a Fellow Labourer in the Gospel of Christ …. Her Gifts, and the Fruits of her Labours.” He set out the pros and cons, and then he stated his conclusion: “Therefore all my seven arguments against marriage are totally set aside. Nay, some of them seem to prove that I ought to marry and that G. M. is the person.”
Unfortunately, John’s brother Charles did not agree. He believed that marriage would hamper John’s evangelistic work. When he heard the news, he galloped over to Grace’s home, jumped off his horse, ran in, and said to her, “Grace Murray, you have broken my heart.” Then he fainted at her feet. That shook Grace so badly that she hastily married another man. Strike two for Wesley!
Finally, a year and a half later, at the age of forty-seven, John did marry, a wealthy widow named Mary Vazeille. I do not know how Wesley chose her or what Charles had to say, but John made a mistake. He had a very unhappy marriage, and, twenty years later, she left him. When she did, Wesley wrote in his journal, “I have not left her; I would not send her away; I will not recall her” (Gary Inrig, Hearts of Iron, Feet of Clay, pages 109-110).
Is knowing the will of God that difficult? Is there not a more Biblical way for discerning God’s will for my life?
In this three-part series, we will discuss
in Part 1, three preliminary statements about the will of God that we should consider in order to know God’s will
In Part 2, three conditions you need to meet to know God’s will for your life
In Part 3, three methods God uses to direct you into His will.
There are three preliminary statements about the will of God that we should consider
1. God’s Will for your life is knowable.
God is not playing a game of “Hide and Go Seek.” Listen to Ephesians 5:17, “Wherefore be not unwise but understanding what the will of the Lord is.” In Colossians 1:19, Paul prayed for the Colossians, “Be filled (controlled) with the knowledge of His will.” God will not command us to do something that is impossible or frustrating.
2. God’s will is not a bitter dose of medicine.
The Psalmist was able to say, “I will delight to do your will” (Psalm 40:8).
Sometimes believers think if I surrender to God’s will He will send me to Afghanistan, or I will have to be single all my life. Whatever God’s will, if we love God, it will be a delight.
3. God’s will is not specifically spelled out in the Bible.
God doesn’t name the person we are to marry. He doesn’t tell us whether we should go to college or not or which college we should attend. God doesn’t email us: “I want you to be a preacher or missionary, or mechanic or nurse or housewife.” Sometimes life is complex with these decisions. In Psalm 32:8, God does promise, “I will instruct you and teach you in the way which you shall go. I will guide you with mine eye.” Today God instructs and teaches us His will through His Word.
In Proverbs 3:5-6, are two of the most compacted verses on God’s will. There are three steps to knowing God’s will in these verses. The book of Proverbs contains God’s wisdom for godly living as 1:1-7, the introduction makes clear. In Proverbs chapters 1-9, Solomon is giving his “My Son” talks. It is as if Solomon has his arm around his son, giving him godly, fatherly advice.
In Proverbs 2 and 3, Solomon is giving a series of “If…then” verses or conditions and consequences. “If” we meet certain conditions, “then” certain consequences will follow. In Proverbs 2, Solomon states in verse 1 “If” and verse 3 “If” and verse 4 “If” you meet the conditions in these four verses, “then” in verses 5-8 and “then” in verses 9-22 these consequences will follow. This series continues into chapter three. In Proverbs 3:5-6, if you meet three conditions then God will consequently “direct your path” into His will. In Part 2, we will study three conditions you need to meet to know God’s will for your life.