From the Cross: Control
- David and Marilynn Chadwick
- 2 days ago
- 2 min read
by David Chadwick
We are looking at the many strongholds that have come from the cross after our local church congregation confessed different hurts and sins during the Easter season. Control is today’s topic.
Control is the delusion that we are in charge of our lives. It leaves people with an illusion of power that they were never meant to have. Only God is in control!
The irony of control is that so often the most controlling people are actually the least self-controlled. They spend all of their emotional energy trying to control everything around them and neglect the only Biblical instruction to control, which is the call to have self-control (Galatians 5:23).
In order to speak accurately about this topic of control, we must first realize that we are called to make wise decisions in accordance with God’s Word. Throughout Scripture, God calls us to live with wisdom, knowledge, and discernment. As followers of Jesus, we should desire to be faithful unto the Lord in every area of our lives!
Regardless of our efforts to be faithful and responsible, how much do we really control? I love this saying: Man proposes, God disposes. Or like Proverbs 16:9 says, “The heart of man plans his way, but the Lord establishes his steps.”
God is the one who ultimately brings about results. He has the overreaching providence to work out his plans for his world (Genesis 50:20). Everything that happens is always moving God’s ultimate plan toward what is needed for our good and for his glory (Romans 8:28). As God said to Job at the end of his ordeals, he says to us, “Where were you when I created the world?”
At the end of the day, we must simply do the best we can. I used to tell my kids, “Do your best and give God the rest.” We should make good decisions and live as responsibly as possible, but we must trust God with the outcome!
Only God controls everything. He is the only one who oversees the world. That is the essence of faith. We know that he will never forsake his children.
God has a plan. He oversees his plan. We must trust him in his plan. Release everything to him. We are called to obey him and then trust him. In the end, we must remain confident that he alone is in control and our lives belong to him!
This truly is the pathway to freedom.