My wife and I prayed over the decision for months. Should I resign or
stay? God gave no clear direction other than a nagging feeling resigning
was the right thing to do.
Early Friday morning, I woke my wife
and whispered, "I know what I'm going to do." Logically, resigning made
little sense. We could move in with Mom, but how would we pay bills? We
decided to sell half of our antique collection just to prove to God we
were serious about obeying Him.
Once we took the faith step,
unforeseen things materialized. We tagged our antiques with
"nonnegotiable" prices and no one dickered. A friend bought a few
things, handed us her payment, and said, "Consider the rest a gift." A
gift for times what she owed. Another friend called: "I shared your
situation with my Sunday School class and asked if they wanted to help."
They gave four times what she expected.
We wanted God to give a
step by step plan; He wanted trust. We wanted assurance we could meet
budget; He said "Don't worry." Many were concerned about our faith
decision, but God said, "You take the step and then I'll open doors."
Abraham probably wanted more specifics too, but God simply told him
to leave his homeland. The only promise was many descendants and God's
presence. So he went: "By faith Abraham, when called to go to a place he
would later receive as his inheritance, obeyed and went, even though he
did not know where he was going" (Hebrews 11:8).
Faith stepping
means moving ahead even when God hasn't given the particulars. I'm more
comfortable with it now than I once was. I've built up a trust factor.
God promises He won't let me down, and He never has. When we're finely
tuned to the Spirit's voice through prayer, we'll always step where God
wants at just the right time. Are you willing to faith step?
Prayer: Lord Jesus, wherever You lead, we'll follow.
Martin Wiles
Harleyville, South Carolina, USA