Getting God’s Consent For Your Project
BY BAYO OGUNMUPE
JEHOVAH does not look at things
man looks at. David’s father didn’t think himself fit to be Israel’s next king
which was why when Samuel came looking for a successor to King Saul, he
presented his eldest son, Eliab, who was a general in Israel’s army.
Prophet Samuel was impressed. Samuel saw
Eliab and thought, ‘‘Surely God’s anointed stands here.” But Jehovah told
Samuel, ‘‘Do not consider his appearance or his height, for I have rejected
him.” God does not look at the things man looks at. Man looks on the outward
appearance but Allah looks at the heart. When it comes to your life’s calling,
only God’s opinion counts. In order to fulfill his destiny, David had to
overcome his family’s opinion of him. Any time you see people pursuing a
mid-career change, you can be certain that they have been living someone else’s
dream and lost their way. Nobel prize winning essayist – Joseph Brodsky
observed: ‘‘One’s task consists first of all in mastering a life that is one’s
own, not imposed from without, no matter how noble its appearance may be. For
each of us is issued but one life, and we know how it all ends. It would be
regrettable to squander this one chance on someone else’s experience.” It isn’t
too late to invite God unto your project. Just do what God wants you to do by
your intuition and capacity. Ask God for a dream of your own and He will give
it to you.
Sadly, try as you may, you will never fulfill
a dream that isn’t your own. You locate your dream by studying your personal
history. You will live the life for which Jehovah created you, only after you
figure out your life’s project. When a dream is right for you and you are right
for a dream, you are single-mindedly magnetted to it.
Paul told Timothy, ‘‘Don’t let anyone look
down on you because you are young.”
The young person has no clear picture of
himself. He sees himself only in the mirror of his parents. A child who is told
repeatedly that he is a bad boy, or is lazy, or no good, or stupid or clumsy,
will tend to act out this picture which the parent or guardian has given him.
You can only get Allah’s consent if you follow His will.
The Philistines made a raid on the Valley of
Rephaim. Then, David inquired from God, saying, ‘‘Shall I go up against the
Philistines? Will you deliver them into my hand?” God said to him, ‘‘Go up, for
I will deliver them into your hand.” At Baal Perazim, David commented, God has
broken through my enemies by my hand like a breakthrough of water. Thereafter,
they called the place Baal Perazim, meaning breaking-through. To get a
breakthrough in your life, you must do like David: One, he reminded himself
that God had made him King. You must know what you stand for. Two, David
enquired from God, shall I go up against the Philistines? God does not respond
to your need, He responds to your obedience. When you have obeyed Jehovah, you
will win. Three, David gave God credit for his victory: ‘‘God has broken
through my enemies,” Chronicles 14:11.
Sometimes, God will do it for you, other
times He will do it through you. That is
why you must hear from God before you settle on a particular project. You
cannot obey God and He abandons you. When you obey God, He will grant you a
breakthrough.
Our champion this week is Baron Paul Julius
Reuter, the German born founder of one of the first news agencies, which still
bears his name. Of Jewish parentage, he became a Christian in 1844 and adopted
the name Reuter.
Reuter was born in Kassel, Germany in 1816,
he became a clerk in his uncle’s bank in Gottingen, Germany where he made the
acquaintance of the eminent mathematician, Friedrich Gauss. At that time Gauss
was experimenting with electric telegraph that was to become important in news
dissemination.
In 1843, he joined a publishing concern in
Berlin which publishes political pamphlets. After hostilities arising from his
pamphlets, he moved to Paris, France in 1848. Reuter then started sending news
he translated from France to Germany. In 1950, he set up a news agency between
Brussels and Germany. Moving to London in 1851, he set up a telegraph office
near the London Stock Exchange. With daily newspapers flourishing, Reuter
persuaded publishers to subscribe to his news agency. His first spectacular
success came when he transmitted to London the text of a speech by Napoleon III
starting the Austro-French war in Italy.
The spread of under sea cables helped Reuter
extend his services. Reuter was created a baron by Duke of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha in
1871. He was given the privileges of this rank in England. He retired as
managing director of Reuters in 1878 and died in Nice, France in February 1899.
His Reuters news agency is still thriving at 164 years.
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