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It’s not what you
do when you know what to do, but what you do when you don’t
know what to do that makes a difference in this life.” There
is a great deal of truth in this simple saying.
There are many
times when we really don’t know just what we should do. When
the course is clear and we know exactly what we should do
it is much simpler, even though we may not even then do what
we know we ought. But when our path is shrouded with fog and
we cannot see the way clearly, the way we walk then really
does make a difference.
Solomon, even before
God gave him the wisdom for which he is so well known, still
had enough wisdom to realize that he did not know what to
do. He expressed it beautifully when he told God. ”I am but
a little child: I know not how to go out or come in.” What
he did when he did not know what to do really made a difference
in his life as it will in ours. He asked God to guide him.
His request to God was, ”Give thy servant an understanding
heart to judge thy people, that I may discern between good
and bad: for who is able to judge this thy so great a people?”
We are told that this ”speech pleased the Lord.”
God will be pleased
with us also if we will simply ask Him to guide our steps
when we do not know what to do. Solomon was probably thinking
back on this occasion when he wrote in the Proverbs that we
should ”Trust in the LORD with all our heart; and lean not
unto our own understanding. In all our ways acknowledge Him
and He shall direct our paths.”
This is what we
should do when we don’t know what to do. Take it to the Lord
in prayer. Ask God to guide our steps. Tell God we are but
a little child and we don’t know how to go out or come in.
God can use us when we acknowledge that we don’t know what
to do and prayerfully and humbly ask Him to direct our paths.
James gives us
good advice along these same lines when he says, ”If any of
you lack wisdom, let him ask of God that giveth to all men
liberally, and upbraideth not; and it shall be given him.
But let him ask in faith, nothing wavering. For he that wavereth
is like a wave of the sea driven with the wind and tossed.
For let not that man think that he shall receive any thing
of the Lord.”
So we see it takes
humility and faith to do what is right when we don’t know
what to do. Humility to pray to God that we don’t know what
to do and faith in believing that He will answer that prayer
and give us wisdom so that we will know what to do.
After taking these
two important steps, there is one final thing that must be
done and this is where many fail. We must then move into action.
God will guide our feet but not while we are sitting down.
After we have prayed and really believe that God hears, God
cares, and God will guide us, then we need to get up and get
going. God does not give us open revelation. He opens and
closes doors as we move forward.
Some have asked
God to guide their steps when they had already decided what
they were going to do and they proceed pel mel in the direction
they want, with little or no regard to God. Rarely will God
intervene if we only give Him lip service that we want Him
to guide our steps. He did strike Paul down as Paul raced
to Damascus and turned him around, but more often God will
simply allow us to go in the wrong direction if that seems
to be our desire. It is important that we truly mean it when
we ask God to give us wisdom and then we move forward in full
assurance that the effectual fervent prayer of a righteous
man availeth much. The key to our success lies in really believing
the wise counsel of Solomon to ”Trust in the LORD with all
our heart; and lean not unto our own understanding.” Then
and only then will ”He direct our paths.”
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