| Daily DevotionThe Coming DaysBy Dr. Bruce C. SwaffieldProfessor, Regent University
 
 CBN.com 
		   Just before the start of a new  year, we make one resolution after another. We set ourselves to lose weight, to  exercise more, to eat healthier, and maybe even to spend less time working. All  of these intentions are commendable, but what about our commitment to the Lord?  How can we seek to serve him better in the weeks and months ahead? 
 The first step we must take is to become more determined, more resolute, to  follow his will. We need to think less of what we want and focus wholly on what  God has planned for us in the year ahead. The apostle James warned about making decisions  based on personal desires and wishes: “You who say, ‘Today or tomorrow we will  go to this or that city, spend a year there, carry on business and make money.’  Why, you do not even know what will happen tomorrow. What is your life? You are  a mist that appears for a little while and then vanishes. Instead, you ought to  say, ‘If it is the Lord's will, we will live and do this or that.’ As it is,  you boast and brag. All such boasting is evil. Anyone, then, who knows the good  he ought to do and doesn't do it, sins.”
 
 When we lay claim to what we are going to do, for example, we sin because we  place greater emphasis on the finite rather than in the infinite. In other  words, we replace God’s will with our own. We boast about our plans to make  money or to prosper in some way when we should be placing our confidence and  trust in God. What he wants us to do will last for eternity. What I want now  will end as soon, and as quickly, as my life on earth ceases to be. My days,  says James, are like a mist that lasts only a short while.
 
 As we begin a new year, we have been given another opportunity to rededicate  our lives to building God’s kingdom as opposed to our little one here in the  world. We can still make resolutions for the next 12 months, but we must  remember to begin them with the phrase, “If it is the Lord’s will.” Any success  we experience is due to him; it is only right and proper that we begin  with him as well.
 
 We do not know for certain what a new year will bring, but we always hope that  it will be better than the last one. We say goodbye to regrets, heartaches,  arguments, missed opportunities, anxieties, perhaps even illness, and  anticipate the coming days with eagerness. Maybe the year ahead will be a time of  personal and professional growth, a time for financial increase, a time for a  new job or a time for a much needed vacation.
 
 While we wonder about the future, God knows what lies ahead. He planned each  moment of this new year long before our birth so many years ago. He alone sees  where we are going and what we will encounter. Everything we are about to face  will be according to his design. What we have to remember, in good times as  well as bad, is that everything will work together for good for those who love  him.
 
 It would be nice to think that nothing evil or difficult will occur this year:  we will not get sick; we will not experience tragedy; we will not be hurt by  others; we will not have any economic problems; we will not confront  disappointment; we will not have to cope with any adversity at all. But the  reality of life is that many of these challenges will occur, and we will not  have an easy time getting through any of them.
 
 Day after day, for three years, Jesus walked from town to town doing the  Father’s will. Each moment, from morning until evening, his life demonstrated  the power and authority of God. He lived in the world without being a part of  it.
 
 Even though Jesus was attacked, maligned, mocked, jeered and rejected, he did  not change. He knew who he was in God and he remained true to his purpose on  earth. Nothing was able to come against him because he allowed himself to be  guided and protected by God’s plan.
 
 Jesus experienced the same temptations that confront us today. He was not  immune to pain and suffering even though he was the Son of God. In fact, we  seldom think about the magnitude of his struggle. Imagine how he must have felt  after living in paradise and then coming down to earth. He came from glory and  grandeur to face sin and corruption. Jesus knew perfection, yet he agreed to  live for a short time among imperfection.
 
 Our Father asks us to do the same. He plans for us to fulfill his good and  perfect will. We, too, are asked to live for him (just as Jesus did) and to  show the way to heaven. If we chose his way, God promises to care for us no  matter what we encounter. He brought Jesus all the way through the cross and  into eternity. Not only will God do the same for us, but we also have Jesus and  the Holy Spirit to intercede on our behalf. The Trinity of the universe is all  around us. Nothing can defeat us as long as we live according to God’s design.
 
 This year we must be willing to trust God more than ever. Rather than placing  our hope and expectations in circumstances around us, we need to put our hope  in him. He is high above any of the troubles that will surely come our way. And  he is ready to guide, protect and sustain us. We have his promise, his  covenant. We are his children and he is our father. He will take care of us  every minute of this new year, even during times of tremendous pain and  suffering. Our hope for the year ahead should be in him, and in his good and perfect plan  for our prosperity. If we can find it in ourselves to place our full faith in  his will, we will see – when we reach Dec. 31 – that this was indeed a  good new year.
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    from the Regent University School of Journalism 
  Bruce Swaffield is a professor in the Regent University School of Journalism 
    in the the College of Communication. He 
    welcomes your e-mail comments.
 
 
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