Surrender: Finding Freedom in JesusНамуна
Thy Will Be Done
For I have come down from heaven not to do my will but to do the will of him who sent me. (v. 38)
As every parent soon learns, children develop a will of their own. It happens early, often during a time we sometimes call “the terrible twos.”
An essential part of our surrender to God is the surrender of our will. The best example of this is Jesus. He came not to seek or do his own will but the will of his father. This is precisely what our attitude must be: to do not our will but God’s.
We cannot be God’s children if we don’t submit to his will. Only when we submit to his will can we gladly and fully accomplish it. The Lord’s Prayer includes the petition “Your will be done” (Matt. 6:10). This is a statement of surrender: to do his will even if it “interferes” with our own will (and to do so without stubbornly dragging our feet).
But in order to say “Yes” to God’s will, we must know what his will for our lives is. We do this by studying his Word and listening to his voice. Romans 12:2 encourages us to be transformed by the renewing of our minds, “that by testing [we] may discern what is the will of God.”
As we surrender our will to him, we can grow in understanding his will. Then we may obediently follow and fulfill it.
As you pray, ask God to do his will in your life.
Scripture
About this Plan
Is it possible to find freedom in surrender? That's just what Jesus taught—freedom comes through surrender to God. To be a follower of Jesus we have to surrender everything to him, but on the other side of surrender, Jesus offers us freedom—freedom from sin, but also freedom to live fully, with joy, in Christ. This 14-day devotional series guides you through Jesus's teaching on surrender.
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