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The messenger Paul says of God, "How unsearchable are his judgments and how equivocal his ways. For who has known the psyche of the Lord?" two or three verses later, he says, "You may observe what is the will of God." He says, It is difficult to get a handle on or comprehend the brain of God. At that point he says, And you will learn it.
We definitely know, from somewhere else in Scripture, the greatest, broadest measurements of God's will for us — what he has uncovered in his pledge. Paul says, "This is the will of God, your blessing" (1 Thessalonians 4:3). His will is for you to wind up increasingly like Christ. And afterward in the following section, "Celebrate dependably, ask without stopping, offer gratitude in all conditions; for this is the will of God in Christ Jesus for you" (1 Thessalonians 5:16– 18). God's will is for you to celebrate dependably, only one out of every odd occasionally, and to implore diligently about everything, and to express gratefulness amidst anything, regardless of how hard.
The witness Peter likewise says, "This is the will of God, that by doing great you should put to hush the numbness of absurd individuals" (1 Peter 2:15). God's will for you is to do the sort of good, with his assistance and quality, that the world can't deny or disgrace.
We know a greater amount of God's will than we frequently acknowledge, yet there is a lot more — vastly more — that we don't know yet (his "mystery will"), and a few things we may never completely get a handle on. Indeed, even paradise won't feel like the finish of our trip into his will; it will feel like the perfect, freed start of an endless investigation into his brain and heart.
So what do we do with what we don't know now?