“As soon as I have delivered this money and completed this good deed of theirs, I will come to see you on my way to Spain. And I am sure that when I come, Christ will richly bless our time together.”
Romans 15:28-29 NLT
These two verses today paint a picture of a reliable man, entrusted with a large amount of money, and refusing to waver from the task before. We get the impression that he is comfortable within himself, and satisfied that he is doing what God wants him to do. His plans, as he wrote in these verses, simplify what was an enormous problem in those days – getting from A to B. The transport links were long, tedious, and tenuous. Anyone carrying a large amount of money was at risk from thieves en route, and Paul was no stranger to shipwrecks and other hazards as he went about God’s business. But he had three goals – take the gift to Jerusalem, get to Spain and spend some time with the Christians in Rome. Through God’s grace, he managed the first, failed (as far as we know) in the second and succeeded in the third though in a way not quite as he planned it.
God had different plans for Paul, and they turned out to be far more effective than Paul’s. His incarceration both before he got to Rome, and after he finally got there as a prisoner, enabled him to reach many more people with the Gospel. Paul’s journey to Rome was fraught with danger and in Acts 28 we read how a shipwreck found him on Malta, where Paul healed many sick people. A potential disaster ended up with God being able to touch people on an island away from the more civilised parts of the Eastern Mediterranean region. And we read about how Paul was placed under house arrest in Rome, and was freely able to fellowship with the Roman believers. We read in Acts 28:30-31, “For the next two years, Paul lived in Rome at his own expense. He welcomed all who visited him, boldly proclaiming the Kingdom of God and teaching about the Lord Jesus Christ. And no one tried to stop him”. Amazing! Paul’s aim was to get to Rome to have a time of rich blessings with the Roman Christians. God’s plan was to see the Gospel preached by the greatest evangelist and theologian of that time, and right in the very heart of the Roman Empire.
We pilgrims make plans. Proverbs 16:3 reads, “Commit to the Lord whatever you do, and he will establish your plans”. Proverbs 3:5-6, “Trust in the Lord with all your heart; do not depend on your own understanding. Seek his will in all you do, and he will show you which path to take”. Our plans sometimes don’t turn out quite as we expect. God uses what we have and what we do to reach others with His grace and love. Like Jonah, sometimes we don’t really want to go God’s way, preferring a more comfortable or less problematic life. But God has a way of using His people to reach the lost and the Holy Spirit will gently but firmly nudge us in the right direction. And if disobedience to God’s ways prevails, God will find someone else who is willing to fulfil His plans. God’s plan for the people on this planet will never be frustrated. This generation will be touched for Him as we shine like beacons in the dark places of this sad world.
Are we shining for God? Many years ago, in my primary Sunday School years, we sang a chorus that went like this:
Keep me shining, Lord, Keep me shining, Lord,
In all I say and do;
That the world may see Christ lives in me
And learn to love Him too.
A simple song, but so profound, with lyrics that have stayed with me all my life. But it sums up where we should start in allowing God to fulfil His plans through us. As Christ lives within us, the world will never miss seeing our God-beacon.
Dear Father God. We echo the song and pray that You keep us shining for You, illuminating the world around us. In Jesus’ name. Amen.
