God Is Up to Something Great

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Scripture

Romans 8:28–30 KJV 1900
28 And we know that all things work together for good to them that love God, to them who are the called according to his purpose. 29 For whom he did foreknow, he also did predestinate to be conformed to the image of his Son, that he might be the firstborn among many brethren. 30 Moreover whom he did predestinate, them he also called: and whom he called, them he also justified: and whom he justified, them he also glorified.
God has a plan for your life. Got that? Everything in your life is part of His perfect plan for you.
First, you were created for a customized purpose by a loving God who knew you before you were born. Therefore, no matter where you might be at this moment, if you haven’t yet found God’s purpose for your life, you need to stop what you’re doing and start looking.
Second, no matter how many good, bad, or ugly things have happened to you, God can still redirect your life to reflect His glory. And there is absolutely nothing in your past—or your present—that He can’t use.
Third, even though it might be foggy outside, and even though you might be a little unclear about exactly where God wants you, that’s okay. Maybe you veered off for a year, maybe even a decade or two. But that’s all right. If nothing else, the story of Joseph should tell you that a certain amount of flailing around is perfectly normal. When you come into this world—kicking and screaming—very few of us know exactly what we’re supposed to do when we grow up. That’s okay—start where you are, right now.
More than anything, as God puts you back on track, He wants to give you a sense of hope. Only God-given hope will sustain you as you move forward in life. To use a fancy word, God-given hope is what I’d call a prerequisite, meaning you’re not going anywhere without it.
Life is unpredictable. One moment everything is fine the next it’s helter skelter. What do you do? Where do you turn? How do you keep from losing it? How do you keep from giving up? When life gets crazy we need to understand that God Is Up to Something Great.

1) Rom. 8:28, “And we know that in all things God works for the good of those who love him, who have been called according to his purpose.”
Breakdown: “and we KNOW”. Paul doesn’t want us to wonder whether or not God is working, he wants us to know that he is. There may be times in our life where it seems God is absent from a particular situation he isn’t. God is working. He’s not being silent, he’s not ignoring our situation; he’s not deaf to our pleas for help. He is at work even if it’s behind the scenes.
Paul wants us to become solid and unquestioning; he wants us to look at God working in our situations as a sure thing, a reliable thing.
We don’t guess, we don’t wish; we know. In this knowing there is faith, there is trust; there is hope. One of the reasons we can say we know is because of what God has done in the past.
We remember how God worked things out for the good in a previous situation. This will help us today when the situation we face is different and we’re tempted to doubt. “in ALL things”.
We don’t have to wonder if God is going to work in this situation-he will. Whether it’s something as major as a natural disaster and we wonder how God could bring any good out of it or if it’s something as trivial as a broken shoelace and we wonder why God would work in it.
In all things, great and small, God works. The question might arise, ‘what about sin? Does God work our sin out for the good too?’ This verse is not saying that God will work in our sin to bring about good things. That would be putting sin in a positive light. God does not want us to sin. There can be good that could come after my sin if I repent from it and learn from the experience. However, this does not mean that God wants me to sin so that good would result. He wishes that I wouldn’t sin in the first place.
Paul already refuted sin being cast in a positive light earlier in chapter six (6:1-shall we go on sinning so that grace may increase? By no means!)
“GOD works”.
We need to recognize who is working. Things don’t work out for good because of karma or by chance; they work out because God has orchestrated that they work out. Also this is a challenge for humility. Typically, the problem is that in all things WE work (or we try to). We try to work things out according to our own understanding or our own timing and we eventually mess it up.
However, if we allow God to work and we get out of his way or we allow ourselves to be subject to his leading and directing then things will work out the way they are supposed to.
And we need to keep in mind, as Isaiah 55:8-9 tells us, that God’s thoughts and ways are not like our thoughts and ways. We don’t have his wisdom; we don’t have his insight. Therefore we need to step aside and let God work.
The way God works often times doesn’t make any sense in the moment but later we see how he orchestrated events or how he worked in a negative situation to bring about great things.
That is important for us to keep in mind when troubling circumstances come our way. “For the GOOD”. Don’t believe the lie that God is working against you. God never works for the bad; everything he works in is for the purpose of bringing about good things; even if it’s discipline.
Hebrews 12:11, “No discipline seems pleasant at the time, but painful. Later on, however, it produces a harvest of righteousness and peace for those who have been trained by it.” Even in discipline God works to bring about something good. “Of those that LOVE him”. There is no promise of God working for the good of those who are against him. God opposes the proud but gives grace to the humble. The guilty will not go unpunished. But for those who love God, for those of us who want to do his will, he will work out every situation for the good. We wonder how God could bring anything good out of a tragic situation. We can be confident that if we love God all things will be worked out for good. We can’t go wrong in loving God.
“Who have been called according to his PURPOSE”. We who are born again have been called by God to live according to his purpose. His main purpose is stated in verse 29-that we would be conformed to the likeness of his son Jesus. In that main purpose are his specific purposes that will help to bring us to that end.
God doesn’t will that we would accomplish our own purposes in life. We gave up the right to accomplish our goals, our will and our purposes when we surrendered to his Lordship over our lives. When we responded to his calling we said at the waters of baptism, “Take control of my life. Your will be done in me and through me from this day forward.” Everything that happens in my life is not good. However, God can take the bad things that happen and turn them around to bring something good out of them. Part of the good that would come out of it would be the development of our character. And part of the good that would come out of that would be for others to see that character and be drawn to God.
2) Change of plans. Have you ever made plans and somewhere along the way God intervened and changed your course? And in the end you could see that if things had went according to your plans they never would’ve amounted to what they did had God not intervened?
Pr. 16:9, “In his heart a man plans his course, but the LORD determines his steps.” God is up to something great when we allow him to take over; when we commit to him the plans of our hearts.
Condolezza Rice said, “Life is full of surprises. Being open to unexpected turns in the road is an important part of success. If you try to plan every step, you may miss those wonderful twists and turns. Just find your next adventure-do it well, enjoy it-and then, not now, think about what comes next.” We have in our minds how things should go. So when things don’t go our way we get frustrated. When something happens that doesn’t fit with our plan we get discouraged. But we need to allow God to direct and redirect our steps to fit his purpose. Then we will realize that God is up to something great. [3 trees story]
3) Life comes at you fast but don’t worry, you’re in good hands. Life came at Joseph fast. Sold into slavery by his brothers. In prison for a false accusation by Potiphar’s wife. How did God work that out for the good?
Joseph is vindicated and then he is raised up to be the one in charge-second only to Pharaoh. He is influential in saving lives through wisely storing grain that would last through the years of famine. Because of which he is reunited with his brothers and with his Father Jacob. Because Joseph stayed true to God in the midst of his undeserved suffering God worked through it all to bring about good. And Joseph recognized it. When his brothers became frightened that Joseph would get back at them for the harm they caused him Joseph reassured them. Gen. 50:20, “You intended to harm me, but God intended it for good to accomplish what is now being done, the saving of many lives.” Joseph came to understand how God’s hand was working throughout all of these difficult circumstances in his life to bring about his purpose not only in Joseph’s life but also in the lives of many others.
Life came at Job fast. God allowed a series of unforeseen events happen in Job’s life. All his kids are killed, his livelihood is stolen away and he is stricken from head to toe with painful boils. The tragedies themselves were not good for they were carried out by Satan, although God allowed them, he didn’t call them good things.
However, God used the bad things to bring about good things. How did God bring good out of it? It was a teaching moment for Job. He showed Job that he was God and that he is sovereign and that he is just and that Job had no business thinking he could stand up to God or figure him out Job 42:1-3.
It was also a teaching moment for Job’s friends. God brought good out of it by showing Job’s friends that they thought they knew what was going on but they were wrong. Job’s friends needed to understand that every tragedy that befalls a Christian’s life wasn’t due to sin. Job’s friends needed to learn a thing or two about compassion. And God also worked things out for the good in Job’s life afterwards. God blessed Job’s life more in the end than he had in the beginning Job. 42:10-17. Has life come at you fast recently? Have you been able to see God at work through it? If not, hold onto Rom. 8:28 because God is surely up to something good.
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