When Chandra
was 39, she left a lucrative job in banking to pursue a
counseling career. Long wanting to make this change, she chose
to move forward when a psychologist friend promised her a
position with his counseling firm once she completed the
necessary training. Spurred on by his gracious offer of
employment, she enrolled in a masters program full-time,
living off savings till she finished her studies.
Chandra’s friend
indeed hired her once she graduated. But a short time later,
he left the practice due to health problems. Without his
leadership, the center foundered, other counselors resigned,
and within a year it folded.
Chandra lacked the
clients and momentum to launch an independent practice, and
she was unable to find work with another counseling agency in
the
Boston
area where she lived. With her savings now depleted, she
returned to a job in banking, leaving her counseling dream on
indefinite hold.
When Chandra shared
her experience with me, she said she was certain God had
taught her a lesson through the frustrating circumstances that
unfolded. He had shown her that she missed his will in
attempting to become a counselor. She spoke repeatedly of
having made a “bad decision.” As I probed a bit, it became
clear that her ruminating wasn’t just ventilation or an
exercise in self-pity. She was strongly convinced she had made
an unfortunate mistake, and she had never questioned this
assumption since the doors at the counseling center closed
several years before. This conviction that she had failed
greatly increased her discouragement, and dampened her zeal to
risk a dream again.
Chandra was
understandably surprised when I shared my own observation. I
felt that her decision to enter the counseling profession
hadn’t been a bad one at all, and that she shouldn’t be
worrying about having missed God’s will. She had based her
choice on the best information she had at the time--that she
had obvious talent and long-standing motivation to become a
counselor, plus an exceptional offer of employment. And she
was taking a step that would increase her potential to
contribute meaningfully to the needs of others. Especially
important, she was a serious Christian who earnestly wanted
God’s will, and she had prayed seriously about her decision.
Which of us, I
thought, faced with her circumstances, would have decided
differently?
Of course, had Chandra
known how events would transpire, she never would have
left banking for counseling. But that’s exactly the point.
God seldom tips his hand about our future, and he guides us as
much by information he withholds from us as by information he
gives us.
He allows us to
develop dreams and expectations, and he uses them to move us
ahead. In some cases, he fulfills these dreams more-less as we
envision them. In other cases, his intent isn’t to fulfill
them but to use them to draw us to a point where, with the new
insight we’ve gained, we can now see clearly to take a new
direction with our life. Through this whole process he
nurtures us with experiences of growth that never would have
been ours if we had known the future--for then we never would
have taken our venture of faith. But the education we gain
through life’s unexpectedly bumpy paths is critical to our
development, and God integrates it into our further experience
in remarkable ways.
I obviously don’t
know God’s intentions for Chandra’s future. She may
re-enter the counseling field at some point. Whether or not
she does, I’m certain that God will use her training and her
experiences at the counseling center in ways that enhance her
ministry for Christ and are deeply gratifying to her--if she
stays open to him and pliable.
This is the lesson
from the experience of another friend of mine who, some years
ago, left the computer field to become a pastor. Though his
congregations loved him, denominational factors made it
difficult for him to minister as a church pastor. Finally, he
left church ministry and, with some chagrin, took a job with a
computer manufacturing firm once again. Yet soon he was
granted permission to hold a weekly Bible study at that
company, which many began attending. His pastoral background
opened doors for ministry at that firm that would have been
closed to him before. His is an inspiring example of how God
uses the total mix of experiences in our life--the successes
and the disappointments--to make us each uniquely effective.
Broken Dreams
When a dream that we
follow backfires, it’s only human to question our original
decision to pursue it, and to wonder if our mind was on
vacation then. Many are unduly hard on themselves at such a
time--even if they had based their choice on the best
information they possibly could have had, and the
circumstances that derailed their dream were impossible to
foresee. We Christians are more prone to berate ourselves than
anyone on such an occasion. Not only do we question our past
judgment, but we get caught up in torturous questions about
God’s will. The fact that we encounter any problems at all
in a major pursuit can make us fear we’ve missed God’s
will, and this concern deepens our sense of failure.
Dealing with failed
expectations is difficult enough. Any of us who has
experienced a setback as crushing as Chandra’s needs time to
grieve our loss and to work through our feelings of
disappointment. Yet add to this discouragement the conviction
that our original decision was unsound, and our regret can be
overwhelming. It can make us doubt that we have the competence
now to turn our life around. And the guilt we feel over
missing God’s will can keep us locked in place, fearing we
lack the potential to follow his guidance successfully.
We should make a keen
effort at such a time to imagine ourselves back in the context
when we made our first choice. What were our circumstances
then? What were the facts as we knew them then? Were we open
to God’s will, and did we make a reasonable effort to seek
it? If in fact our decision was the best it could have been
under the circumstances, we should be gentle and affirming
with ourselves now. We should strive to think as positively as
we possibly can about that past decision. Rather than assume
it was a bungled choice, we should regard it as a wise,
competent decision--that in time may even prove to have been
brilliant and enlightened.
We should strive also
to appreciate the dynamic nature of God’s guidance, and how
he brings us to important points in our life’s journey most
often by a circuitous route. In time, we’ll likely look back
on our current crisis as a vital turning point, which God has
used to open up welcome new horizons for us. Such
faith-inspired thinking will help us greatly to break the
spell of regret, and to better recognize God’s new
directions for us now.
Taking Heart at Turning Points
This isn’t to say
that we’re incapable of making bad decisions as Christians.
We find many examples in Scripture where choices made by
otherwise godly people are presented as bad ones. But in every
such case, the person was either insensitive to God’s
leading, untrusting of him, or unfaithful to him--and in a
major way. The leaders of
Israel
were beguiled into making a treaty of peace with
Gibeon
, for instance, because they “did not ask direction of the
Lord” (Jos 9:14 RSV).
I’m not aware of any
instance in Scripture, however, where someone made a
reasonable effort to understand God’s will and to make a
decision responsibly, and yet the biblical writer judged that
choice as incompetent because of the results that took place.
There are plenty of instances where individuals themselves
questioned the sanity of decisions that God in fact had led
them to make. Moses was so exasperated at Pharaoh’s initial
refusal to let the Jews leave
Egypt
that he thought he had made the mistake of his life in
petitioning the ruler to let them go. And when the Israelites
faced challenges in their desert march, they concluded they
had erred horrendously in leaving
Egypt
, even though they were initially ecstatic to break free of
slavery there.
Yet never do we find a
biblical writer (or God through that writer) passing judgment
on someone’s good-faith decision due to problems that arose.
The obstacles people encountered in such cases always had a
higher purpose. Sometimes God used these setbacks to
strengthen their faith, their trust in him and their resolve
to stay committed to a challenging course of action. This was
clearly his intent with all the difficulties the Israelites
endured en route to Canaan, which never on any occasion were
an indictment on their original decision to leave
Egypt
.
In other cases, God
used hindrances to signal that, however enlightened
someone’s initial decision was, he or she should now take a
new direction. We find several instances of God’s guiding in
this manner in Acts 16. Paul is twice hindered from entering
regions where he wants to minister--Asia and
Bithynia
--then ends up in Troas briefly, only to be redirected to
Macedonia
. He manages initially to ignite a church in
Macedonia
, but after a brief time is compelled by unfriendly town
authorities to leave. In each instance, Paul interprets
obstacles as God’s sign, not that his ministry goals are
wrong, but that it’s now time to look for greener pastures.
Any time you or I take
a step of faith but then encounter a significant setback, we
face the task of determining God’s intent. Is he merely
testing our faith, and not wanting this problem to deter us
from forging ahead toward our goal? Or is he showing us that
we should now take a fresh direction? Discerning God’s will
in such a case can be no small challenge. Being confident our
original decision was sound doesn’t relieve us of the need
now to pray earnestly and to draw once again on everything we
know about understanding God’s guidance.
But how we think about
that past decision can make a radical difference in our
ability to hear God now, since the concern that we blew it can
weigh us down to the point of distraction. Fortunately, we may
be freed forever from the fear that a past decision that we
made responsibly with an open heart to God’s will might now
have to be judged misguided. This fact alone--that we are not
compelled to have second thoughts about that decision--is
tremendously liberating in itself. It can save us from the
slippery slope of regret, and allow us the mental energy to
confront our current situation creatively and optimistically.
This is enormously good news for any of us who are inclined to
comb over our past and to condemn ourselves for what we cannot
change.
How Badly Can We Miss God’s Will?
An issue remains, and
it can be a thorny one. The perspective we’re suggesting on
past decisions is encouraging if we know that we were
open to God’s will in a given choice and did our best to
make it responsibly. But what if the opposite was true? We
rushed our decision, without regard to what God wanted? Or we
failed to trust him adequately, following the course of least
resistance, instead of taking on challenges that would have
been healthy for us? Or we knew full well that God wanted us
to take a certain path, but in rebellion we chose another?
And what if the
decision in question was a pivotal one, which forever affects
our life in a significant way? Have we irrevocably missed
God’s perfect will for the rest of our life? Are we
compelled now to live with his second best?
Some well-meaning
Christians will answer that, yes, God’s second-best is all
we can settle for now. I once read a popular book on knowing
God’s will in which the author spoke with regret about an
early vocational decision he had made. God had called him to
be a missionary when he was young, he explained, but he chose
instead to become a physician. Now, writing his book much
later in life, he lamented that he had forever cast himself
out of God’s perfect will by following a medical career, and
that he was only in a position now to experience God’s
second-best options for him.
The author’s
humility in speaking so freely of his own failure was
refreshing. Yet his view of God was tragically small. Would
the all-powerful God whom he served, who loved him so greatly,
really let him get away with a mistake of this dimension?
Abraham failed
profoundly in seeking to have a child by Hagar, and he and his
family suffered consequences thereafter. Yet his sin didn’t
deter God from bringing about the most important aspects of
his plan for Abraham: Sarah still bore a child in her old age,
and Abraham still became the father of countless descendants.
David sinned even more
greatly when he sought a tryst with Bathsheba, and then had
her husband killed in war. The consequences in this case were
especially severe: God slew Bathsheba’s son whom she bore by
David, in spite of David’s earnest pleas that God spare the
child. That punishment, plus rebuke from the prophet Nathan,
drove David to sincere repentance and deep sorrow over his
lapse. But Scripture never implies that from this point on
David had to live with God’s second best for his life. God
still fulfilled his major promises for David. Most
interestingly, God even worked David’s most serious mistake
into his plan. Bathsheba became his wife, and it was she
who gave birth to Solomon, the son who succeeded David on the
throne. “She bore a son, and [David] called his name
Solomon. And the LORD
loved him” (2 Sam 12:24).
At first, it seems surprising that God allowed Bathsheba to
have this supremely positive role in David’s life. Wasn’t
God being overly permissive here? And wasn’t David left
thinking he had benefited from his sin and from now on could
presume upon God’s grace? I suspect, though, that the effect
upon David was quite the opposite. God’s action was
undoubtedly extremely humbling to him--an extraordinary
reminder of just how thoroughly God was in control of his
destiny.
This unspeakably
far-reaching role that God plays in our lives as believers is
best described by Paul, when he notes that God chose us to
follow Christ “before the foundation of the world” (Eph
1:4). This means that our sin doesn’t take him by surprise,
and doesn’t fatally broadside his plan for our life. He
knows when and how we will fail before we ever do. He makes no
promise to protect us from the unfortunate results of our sin.
But when we sincerely repent and seek his forgiveness, we
put ourselves in position to experience his best for our life
from that point forward. To say we have forever removed
ourselves from God’s perfect will in this case is to paint
too small a picture of God, and to miss the authority he takes
for working out his plan for us.
When we know we have
truly failed Christ, repentance is exceedingly important, and
we should give it serious attention. Yet, as time moves on, he
doesn’t wish us to be sidelined with regret, but wants us to
focus on the future, not the past--and to take heart that he
will work even our most heinous failures into his perfect plan
for our life.
Indeed,
to embrace that hope as a matter of deepest faith is one of
the best decisions we can make.
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