Diggin Deep
Active Member
Embracing the tension of submission
God, please help me trust that even though life sometimes feels uncertain, the changes and challenges that occur in my life are all part of something much bigger, a plan you’ve made that goes beyond what I can see or comprehend.
READ
Ecclesiastes 8:1-6
REFLECT
This is a tricky one. How do we compel ourselves to submit to higher authority, even when it seems that doing so runs against our hunches or desires? It’s a difficult directive, indeed, to submit to someone else’s direction.
But Solomon makes a powerful point when he refers not to mortal kings, but to the King over everything: it’s not always easy submitting to God’s will, but submission to the wisest of wise, the highest of all powers, is the only way to find our true missions and purpose in this life.
RESPOND
Submitting to authority, whether it’s a teacher, a boss, a leader or even God’s will, isn’t easy. The next time you’re faced with the tension of having to submit to another’s authority, think about that person’s or institution’s perspective: can he or she see more about a situation than you can, information that could lead to a wiser decision? Does considering this make it easier to go along with the leader’s direction?
God, please help me trust that even though life sometimes feels uncertain, the changes and challenges that occur in my life are all part of something much bigger, a plan you’ve made that goes beyond what I can see or comprehend.
READ
Ecclesiastes 8:1-6
REFLECT
This is a tricky one. How do we compel ourselves to submit to higher authority, even when it seems that doing so runs against our hunches or desires? It’s a difficult directive, indeed, to submit to someone else’s direction.
But Solomon makes a powerful point when he refers not to mortal kings, but to the King over everything: it’s not always easy submitting to God’s will, but submission to the wisest of wise, the highest of all powers, is the only way to find our true missions and purpose in this life.
RESPOND
Submitting to authority, whether it’s a teacher, a boss, a leader or even God’s will, isn’t easy. The next time you’re faced with the tension of having to submit to another’s authority, think about that person’s or institution’s perspective: can he or she see more about a situation than you can, information that could lead to a wiser decision? Does considering this make it easier to go along with the leader’s direction?