The Doer of God's Will
- Dr. Ray E. Heiple, Jr.

- 5 days ago
- 4 min read
Then I said, “Behold, I have come—in the volume of the book it is written of Me—to do Your will, O God.”
Hebrews 10:7 NKJV
This morning we look at Westminster Larger Catechism Question 192, which asks, “What
do we pray for in the third petition?” It gives the answer, “In the third petition (which is, Thy
will be done in earth, as it is in heaven,) acknowledging, that by nature we and all men are
not only utterly unable and unwilling to know and do the will of God, but prone to rebel
against his word, to repine and murmur against his providence, and wholly inclined to do
the will of the flesh, and of the devil: we pray, that God would by his Spirit take away from
ourselves and others all blindness, weakness, indisposedness, and perverseness of heart;
and by his grace make us able and willing to know, do, and submit to his will in all things,
with the like humility, cheerfulness, faithfulness, diligence, zeal, sincerity, and constancy, as
the angels do in heaven.”
Sometimes a question is also a confession. When I asked my wife if we were not supposed
to cut the apple pie that was in the refrigerator, her response was, “Honey, that was for
tonight!” She intuitively understood that my question included my confession. Similarly
the third petition of the Lord’s Prayer includes an implied confession. When we ask God for
His will to be done on earth as it is done in heaven, we are confessing that currently it is
not. We are also confessing that God alone can rectify this incongruity and bring it about
so that His will shall be done on earth as it is in heaven. As the Catechism states, because
of our fallen natures all human beings are “utterly unable and unwilling to know and to do
the will of God.” We are both unable and unwilling. We are unable for apart from God’s
revealing His will to us we have no access to it. Now God has revealed His will to us in
general and in special revelation but that does not solve the problem for we are also by
nature unwilling to know and to do God’s will. Sinful man naturally suppresses God’s
general revelation in unrighteousness (Rom. 1:18-32), and twists God’s special revelation to
his own destruction (2 Pet. 3:16). We do not want the knowledge of God’s will to be
accurately communicated, and even when it is we are by nature opposed to doing it.
Therefore, this petition acknowledges that we need more than accurate information in
order to do God’s will. If God’s will is going to be done on earth as it is done in heaven, God
is going to have to do it. He is going to have to change the wills of fallen men so that we do
not continue to resist knowing and doing His will. Moreover, our problem is not merely
that we are opposed to God’s will, the Catechism states that we are also “prone to rebel
against his word, to repine and murmur against his providence.” Here the word repine
means to feel dissatisfied about. Fallen man in His unwillingness to do God’s will is not in
any sense a victim or even a passive bystander. We see God’s will in creation and in His
word. We experience it in the provision and care we have in our lives and we do not like it.
We are like the Israelites grumbling in the wilderness. They did not have water as much or
as often as they wanted it. God gave them bread from heaven and they did not like it. They
grew tired of it. They wanted meat and melons. They grumbled against the leaders that
God had given them. They grumbled against one another. God was providing for them
according to His will, but they wanted their own will. They thought God was doing a poor
job of providing for them.
We are much the same. We look at the evils in this world and wonder why does God allow
them? We see our leaders act foolishly and we grumble against them and mock them,
even though we know that every authority is from God (Rom. 13). We see our churches or
our ministries struggle and we seek to introduce unbiblical practices that promise to make
things easier. Not only this but we are naturally inclined to the will of our sinful natures (the
flesh) and to the will of the devil. Thus we see just how much we need to pray for our
Father in heaven to cause His will to be done on earth as it is in heaven! This petition
should be made with humble and yet hopeful hearts. We should despair of any ability in
ourselves to do God’s will. But we should confidently and joyfully expect this request to be
answered because Jesus, who did God’s will perfectly, taught us to look to and to ask God
our heavenly Father to do it.




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