by jimwalton » Wed Jun 04, 2014 4:18 pm
There sure are a lot of times we wish he could do that. The Scriptures, though, are not about God weighing in on issues, but explaining to us the legal contract between Him and us, with the benefits of compliance and the consequences for infraction. In the process, he uses the contract to reveal what he is like to us. That's what the Bible is. Obviously throughout the 1600 or so pages, he speaks to a lot of issues, but he rarely, if ever, speaks to them thoroughly and systematically, but only as they traverse the contract stipulations and examples, or come in to play as to his revelation of himself. The Bible is not God addressing issues. So irrefutably there are lots of issues that we wish God would weigh in on, but that's not what the Bible is about.
So, then, how are people to decide about these momentous, life-affecting issues?
- If God has spoken specifically about it in the Bible, then obey that.
- If God hasn't spoken about it by command, there may be principles in the Bible that help guide to a responsible answer.
- If God hasn't spoken about it by command or principle, a person is free and responsible to choose his own course of action, seeking the most godlike and God-pleasing path he can determine.
- In all decisions, a person should read the word of God for guidance, seek the wisdom of God through the Spirit of God in prayer, and make the best decision he or she knows how to make.
God has given to believers His Spirit inside them, to help them in these matters. He also has endowed us with brains, and he expects us to use them to their fullest extent. Our goal is always to please God and to reflect the values and ways of his kingdom as best we can determine them.