Tuesday, February 11,
2025
CONTENT WARNING: A lengthy
classic
THE WILL OF THE LORD
BE DONE!
Acts 21:10-14
10 And as we tarried
there many days, there came down from
11 And when he was
come unto us, he took Paul's girdle, and bound his own hands and feet, and
said, Thus saith the Holy Ghost, So shall the Jews at
12 And when we heard
these things, both we, and they of that place, besought him not to go up to
13 Then Paul
answered, What mean ye to weep and to break mine heart? for I am ready not to
be bound only, but also to die at
14 And when he would
not be persuaded, we ceased, saying, The will of the Lord be done.
Who was Agabus?
He is mentioned only
one other time when he prophesied that there would be a great drought and
famine which came to pass under Claudius. It is not clear whether this Jew was
a Christian as well but it is clear that he was connected to God’s network of
knowledge.
Acts 11:28
28 And there stood
up one of them named Agabus, and signified by the
spirit that there should be great dearth throughout all the world: which
came to pass in the days of Claudius Caesar.
What was the
significance of the girdle – or belt?
Paul was determined
to go to
As prophets are
prone to do, Agabus used symbolic gestures to foretell future events. He took
Paul’s girdle, that long belt that held everything in place and used it to tie
his own hands and feet. This signified that the owner of the belt would be
bound and taken captive. This would have been a tremendous blow to the program
of Christ.
His friends warned
him not to go?
Paul’s friends got
the message! Do not go down to
Paul determined to
go!
Paul was ready not
only to be bound but to die if necessary. If this was what God wanted then it
was what Paul wanted also. He silenced the argument by saying “the will of the
Lord be done.”
What about God’s
will?
I know of nothing in
the Christian life so confusing and controversial than discerning the will of
God. So much goes into knowing His will that it is easy to misinterpret the
signals. First there are our own human opinions and tendencies conditioned by so
many things there is not room to include them here. Surely, we think, God’s
will would not contradict common sense!
Is the will of God
always to be thought of as unpleasant? Does God always call us to a life of
missions in
It’s strange isn’t
it that we never ascribe pleasant things to God. We simply take them for
granted. Cool breezes on bright days are the way things SHOULD be. Insurance
companies are clear that earthquakes, floods, high winds and hail are all “acts
of God.”
Yet, if being bound
and suffering pain should be Paul’s lot he was determined to follow God’s plan.
Dear Lord, we do not
know what today will bring forth. We have no Agabus to warn us. Guide us
clearly into thy will and give us the courage to comply. AMEN
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