- Jun 9, 2014
- 1,009
- 788
- Country
- South Africa
- Gender
- Male
- Faith
- Christian
- Marital Status
- Married
Hi everyone, does God's will for us change if circumstances change?
Scenario: God seems to place on someone's heart (mine) to plant a church in Philadelphia (would involve immigrating).
Several prophecies and words confirm this for my wife and I. They all seem quite specific and come from some who had no idea about it.
But after three years of working on it, several circumstances seem to prevent it. Finances (no job offers, no US-based clients for business. Health. Emotional capacity. And difficult visa process. My lawyer even got cancer. Meanwhile, lots of doors open back home to further ministry and growth in business.
Possible reasons for the discrepancy:
1. Circumstances changed and God would rather have us stay. Prophecies were contingent on circumstances.
2. Prophecies were all false
3. Prophecy no longer exists as a gift today
4. Prophecies were contingent on our own ability, but we failed (my emotional health and my wife's is in the doldrums, after years of living in limbo and feeling the pressure of planting. I don't feel I personally have the capacity to immigrate my family and plant a church, my personality also doesn't, in my mind, match up. I live with massive anxiety every day, which will only get worse if we immigrate)
5. Prophecy was only to highlight a possibility God was happy with, not to give direction
6. Prophecy was used to test us - but to test to see if we would go? Or to test we would stay? As a husband, staying seems more biblical to take care of my family - we are not in a place to take a risk. But, of course, faith often involves a risk! So, do we miss our inheritance by deciding to stay?
I've posted this in the controversial forum to allow for wild theories and speculation, rather than the advice forum where we can't debate. It's a nice opportunity to let our theology work on a real-life situation rather than a theoretical one.
The answers to these questions talk a lot into God's sovereignty and his call and our decision-making. Should make for an interesting debate!
Scenario: God seems to place on someone's heart (mine) to plant a church in Philadelphia (would involve immigrating).
Several prophecies and words confirm this for my wife and I. They all seem quite specific and come from some who had no idea about it.
But after three years of working on it, several circumstances seem to prevent it. Finances (no job offers, no US-based clients for business. Health. Emotional capacity. And difficult visa process. My lawyer even got cancer. Meanwhile, lots of doors open back home to further ministry and growth in business.
Possible reasons for the discrepancy:
1. Circumstances changed and God would rather have us stay. Prophecies were contingent on circumstances.
2. Prophecies were all false
3. Prophecy no longer exists as a gift today
4. Prophecies were contingent on our own ability, but we failed (my emotional health and my wife's is in the doldrums, after years of living in limbo and feeling the pressure of planting. I don't feel I personally have the capacity to immigrate my family and plant a church, my personality also doesn't, in my mind, match up. I live with massive anxiety every day, which will only get worse if we immigrate)
5. Prophecy was only to highlight a possibility God was happy with, not to give direction
6. Prophecy was used to test us - but to test to see if we would go? Or to test we would stay? As a husband, staying seems more biblical to take care of my family - we are not in a place to take a risk. But, of course, faith often involves a risk! So, do we miss our inheritance by deciding to stay?
I've posted this in the controversial forum to allow for wild theories and speculation, rather than the advice forum where we can't debate. It's a nice opportunity to let our theology work on a real-life situation rather than a theoretical one.
The answers to these questions talk a lot into God's sovereignty and his call and our decision-making. Should make for an interesting debate!