In discovering the word “destiny” found within many Bible translations, I was able to draw forth even more passages previously yet presented. Going back to Day 9 of the timeline, chronological reading plan, we find the below words from Job. Of course, it is reasonable to ask if Job felt that he had the free, unrestricted right to choose his life and the happenings within it:
Job 23:13-17 NLT – “But once he has made his decision, who can change his mind? Whatever he wants to do, he does. So he will do to me whatever he has planned. He controls my destiny. No wonder I am so terrified in his presence. When I think of it, terror grips me. God has made me sick at heart; the Almighty has terrified me. Darkness is all around me; thick, impenetrable darkness is everywhere.”
Isn’t it reasonable to suggest that now that Job has undergone such incredible hardship at the Hand of the Lord (the horrific events through chapter 23 that he has endured), he much more fully grasps his God’s Power and is thus subsequently terrified by it? I submit to “you” that when a person is chosen to have the Lord revealed to him or her in such a Powerful and Almighty way, they finally and firmly grasp what it means to possess True Fear of the Lord. Job isn’t necessarily terrified of God Himself, for Job Loves the Lord with all his heart, soul, and mind. Instead, Job is terrified by what the Lord is capable of doing to him . . . meaning that Job recognizes the Supreme, total, and utter Power of God to the degree that he realizes that there are no limits to what God can and cannot do.
Looking at the text above, Job states that when God has implemented a decision for a person’s life, those decisions are final, and no one possesses the Power to thwart them. Job advances this concept by stating that God will do to him, Job, whatever He, the Lord, has Planned to do. Even further, Job presses on to say that the Lord controls his destiny. And when Job makes such a statement, isn’t he acknowledging that he, Job, is NOT in control over his fate? If God controls the destiny of Job, by default, Job cannot be in control of that same destiny. If Job is not in control over his own destiny, then clearly, the Lord is the one who dictates, directs, and establishes life events (for him).
If this principle does not apply to us, why would we need to read such Scriptures? Consistently, I am posting Scripture that points out the Plan of God. And in fact, we find here that Job mentions that God not only followed His Plan regarding himself (Job), but he states that God controls his destiny. In the life of Job, we find the Plan of God and how it is the Lord who determines destiny. These two concepts and principles run hand in hand with one another.
Ephesians 2:10 KJV – “For we are his workmanship, created in Christ Jesus unto good works, which God hath before ordained that we should walk in them.”
Job 23:13-17 NLT – “But once he has made his decision, who can change his mind? Whatever he wants to do, he does. So he will do to me whatever he has planned. He controls my destiny. No wonder I am so terrified in his presence. When I think of it, terror grips me. God has made me sick at heart; the Almighty has terrified me. Darkness is all around me; thick, impenetrable darkness is everywhere.”
Isn’t it reasonable to suggest that now that Job has undergone such incredible hardship at the Hand of the Lord (the horrific events through chapter 23 that he has endured), he much more fully grasps his God’s Power and is thus subsequently terrified by it? I submit to “you” that when a person is chosen to have the Lord revealed to him or her in such a Powerful and Almighty way, they finally and firmly grasp what it means to possess True Fear of the Lord. Job isn’t necessarily terrified of God Himself, for Job Loves the Lord with all his heart, soul, and mind. Instead, Job is terrified by what the Lord is capable of doing to him . . . meaning that Job recognizes the Supreme, total, and utter Power of God to the degree that he realizes that there are no limits to what God can and cannot do.
Looking at the text above, Job states that when God has implemented a decision for a person’s life, those decisions are final, and no one possesses the Power to thwart them. Job advances this concept by stating that God will do to him, Job, whatever He, the Lord, has Planned to do. Even further, Job presses on to say that the Lord controls his destiny. And when Job makes such a statement, isn’t he acknowledging that he, Job, is NOT in control over his fate? If God controls the destiny of Job, by default, Job cannot be in control of that same destiny. If Job is not in control over his own destiny, then clearly, the Lord is the one who dictates, directs, and establishes life events (for him).
If this principle does not apply to us, why would we need to read such Scriptures? Consistently, I am posting Scripture that points out the Plan of God. And in fact, we find here that Job mentions that God not only followed His Plan regarding himself (Job), but he states that God controls his destiny. In the life of Job, we find the Plan of God and how it is the Lord who determines destiny. These two concepts and principles run hand in hand with one another.
Ephesians 2:10 KJV – “For we are his workmanship, created in Christ Jesus unto good works, which God hath before ordained that we should walk in them.”