I Know My Purpose… Now What?
I have a relationship with Jesus Christ. I’m saved and secure. I’m on my way to heaven someday. But I still live here and I know that my purpose is to glorify Jesus Christ in all of the life that I have left. But how?
A common plight Christians suffer is this wrestling between getting ready to do something, and doing it now. When I surrendered to God’s calling on my life to ministry, I wrestled – do I spend some years in school, doing little and learning much, or do I get involved, doing much but perhaps learning little. I’ve heard it preached both ways. You have too, and it’s confusing, isn’t it?
Paul is, perhaps, one of the greatest demonstrators of this struggle, and how to blend the two options in a life lived for God’s glory and purpose. I’m not normally prone to preaching “three P’s” but they just came to my mind so smoothly as I read Acts 9 in preparation for tonight’s teaching from the life of Paul. Here’s what Paul’s example inspires us to do…
ONCE I KNOW MY PURPOSE…
1. I Need to Be Passively Receiving
Paul was blind and a bit helpless. God sent a messenger in the form of Ananias to tell Paul his purpose for his life. His purpose was threefold:
- To bear God’s name before the Gentiles (including dignitaries).
- To reach the children of Israel.
- To suffer… a lot.
So God gave Paul purpose. He also gave him a healing and the physical strength he would need, as well as the fulness of the Holy Spirit. These were God’s gifts, and Paul needed to submissively and passively receive them.
2. I Need to Be Promptly Obeying
Watch the word… “And straightway (immediately) he preached Christ.” (9:20) There is no hesitation to do God’s will. Here’s an important life principle: Once you know what God’s will is for your life, the proper time to begin doing that will is right now. Why wait? What good reason is there? Delay is disobedience, unless God’s will includes not only an instruction, but also the preparation for the fulfillment of that instruction. The third thing we should be doing once we know God’s will…
3. I Need to Be Patiently Preparing
Verse 22 starts out, “But Saul increased (grew) the more…” and verse 23 says “And after many days were fulfilled…” Though we aren’t certain, it’s probable that these verses represent a chronological gap in the story of Paul. What was he doing during that gap? Paul tells us in Galatians 1:15-18:
But when it pleased God, who separated me from my mother’s womb, and called me by his grace, to reveal his Son in me, that I might preach him among the heathen; immediately I conferred not with flesh and blood: Neither went I up to Jerusalem to them which were apostles before me; but I went into Arabia, and returned again unto Damascus. Then after three years I went up to Jerusalem to see Peter, and abode with him fifteen days.
This is a tough one. Paul preached immediately, then obeyed the calling of the Holy Spirit into the Arabian desert to learn directly from Him about how Christ was the story of the Old Testament.
Paul knew his purpose and it was specific – to present and argue for the claims of Christ. So God educated him for it. I’ve often seen and experienced personally the tragedy of impatience in preparation. We justify our haste with the idea that we could die soon or Jesus could come again. But if that happens while we’re in the center of God’s will preparing, what better place to be?
Take action, but take time. God is just as concerned with growing His messengers than He is with getting the message out.
I know God’s purpose for my life, so I need to obey and take action. But I also need to prepare, and I’ll never apologize for time spent at the feet of Jesus readying myself to fulfill my lifetime calling.








Brandon is first and foremost a follower of Jesus Christ. He's a husband to
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