Trusting vaguely
How will we fare in 2008? What disasters, like serpents eggs, are even now congealing that will hatch before year’s end?
I received my “World Challenge” monthly newsletter from David Wilkerson’s
My inmate correspondent Bubba says the reason “the five foolish virgins” of Matthew 25 didn’t bring extra oil with them for the wedding banquet was because they didn’t really believe the groom was coming. I had never thought of that.
The Friar in Romeo and Juliet warned Romeo that “vague confession yields vague absolution.” Similarly, Wilkerson says many of us trust God vaguely: “Most Christians have a general trust in the Lord.” That kind of trust won’t do when the crunch comes, he says. We need to know the promises of God and claim them. The Puritans called it “suing for grace.” Wilkerson says “every promise of the Lord is a holy argument.”
A kind soul sent me a calendar for 2008, each day footnoting a specific promise of God. Heck, I didn’t even know there were 365 promises in the Bible, did you?














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back to top5 Comments to “Trusting vaguely”
That fraud and false prophet David Wilkerson is still going? How does he show his face in public? If you ever want a good laugh, get a copy of his book The Vision, from the late 70s O think. I found it in a used bookstore for a quarter. It’s all these dire prophecies of doom, a lot of them involving homosexuals acting like the original Sodomites. He said the Lord told him all these things would come true and to publish the book to warn America. What a lying bozo.
The Cross and the Switchblade and the Complete Jackass
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I guess I’m not sure what kind of trust we’re talking about here. If it means trusting God to take care of every detail of my life such that I don’t have to work or plan, then yes, I admit I fail to trust at that level. And there’s enough about diligence in Proverbs to make me think that’s okay.
If it means trusting him to keep me isolated from bad events such as disasters and bereavement, I also have a problem with that because I’m asking God to contradict himself.
But if it’s trusting him to give me strength to weather what problems I DO face, then I’m all about that.
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Jeremy Grantham, a Boston large-scale investment manager, in a recent quarterly report talks about that part of the horror movie when they raise your hopes. The last of the dragon scourge has been killed off; you get a moment’s relief. Then the closing shot reveals a large clutch of dragon’s eggs hatching. Grantham goes on to say: “We have more than enough [financial] dragon’s eggs to keep this horror show going for a long time.”
Being closely involved in the field of finance, I tend to agree with Grantham and can only hope an pray that I have sufficient faith and strength to deal with the hard blows ahead.
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Is trusting wildly the opposite of trusting vaguely?
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I would say that trusting practically (specifically taking action and making decisions based upon trust in God) is the opposite of trusting vaguely.
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