FlashForward, or guidance and the grace of God Scott Newling

Scott Newling

Over the last few weeks, Emma and I have enjoyed watching the new TV show FlashForward. In the first episode, the entirety of humanity blacks out simultaneously for exactly two minutes and 17 seconds. During this blackout, everyone has a ‘flash-forward’, and experiences a snapshot of their own life six months in the future.

We're looking forward to seeing how the show unfolds, but for the moment, we've been struck by the various reactions to these ‘visions’ set up amongst the main characters: contentment, joy, terror, and so on. At one point, the dialogue presents it starkly for the viewer: half the world is desperate for their vision to come true, and the other half is desperate to avoid it. Em and I have found ourselves often reminded of how powerfully it illustrates something that I was preaching about a few months ago.

Six months ago I was preaching a series on guidance: does God guide, how does he guide, what does he guide us in, and where is he guiding us, and so on. Along the way, I took some time to answer the question “Why doesn't God just give me a map of my life—tell me what I'm supposed to do?”. A part of my answer was this: it's actually God's grace that he doesn't tell us.

Let me explain. Psalm 139 tells me that I can't escape God's will: at no time or place in creation can I ever think, act or speak in such a way that it is outside of God's sovereignty: “In him we live and move and have our being” (Acts 17:28). But just because this is true, it doesn't mean that I need to know what the details of it are: God may have every hair of my head numbered, but I don't need to know how many there are. I can and should trust him with my life. In fact, the reality that God is in control of my days and that I don't know means that I can only respond to this in light of God's character—trusting his faithfulness to the promises he makes about my life, death and eternal life, so that I need not fear tomorrow, nor be anxious about it.

But what if I did know? It's at that point we need a healthy understanding of our sinfulness.

Take, for instance, the question (nearly) every young person wants to know the answer to: “Who has God decided I am going to marry?” My answer is this: what if the future isn't something you want to hear? What if the person God has decided for you to marry will commit adultery: would you still marry them? If the person couldn't have children, would you still marry them? Or in a conversation I had with one lady after I preached this, what if God intends for you to marry a husband who will have severe, incapacitating depression for 15 years?

It's at this point (once we know that our future in God's plan isn't what we'd plan) that our desire to avoid God's will emerges. If you knew that you'd die of a car crash on a particular day, would you get into a car that morning?

It's God's grace to us that we don't know. It reduces our propensity to rail against his will, or our desire to give in to the temptation to avoid it. It allows us to trust him without knowing things beyond our ability to bear. In talking to the lady whose husband was mentally incapacitated, she spoke in no uncertain terms about how she'd have reacted if she'd known ahead of time: she'd have shot through.

For the moment, at least, FlashForward has powerfully illustrated this tendency. It's also provoked thought for me on the other side of the coin: what would our natural selves do when we find out our future is good (according to our own desires)? Would we take it into our own hands, and view ourselves as makers of our own destiny?

5 Comments »

Nice one Scott - that’s a really helpful insight! Keep ‘em coming, I say.

Kirsty McNamara30/10/2009 08:40 AM

Hi Scott,

Thanks for the article.  It was helpful.
I’d previously thought that if we had a roadmap of our lives that we wouldn’t have to trust God and seek after him as much as if we didn’t have. 

While I think that is still true, I think your point about our sinfulness (which would then lead us to avoid God’s plan) is perhaps more critical.  After all, we see that God uses all things to conform us to the image of Christ, including - and especially - suffering and trials.

And anyway, we must also remember our place.  We are the creature not the creator.

Kirsty

Dianne Howard30/10/2009 08:50 AM

We are not to be fatalistic, yet in suffering we are to be very ‘flash forward’ people.  The difference between us and our secularist world is that we know what we are to do tomorrow and are responsible for deciding to do good. We know are constantly to make decisions to do the good that God has planned. We know our inheritance.

We are to trust him knowing there will suffering. God does not want us to live in denial of tomorrow’s difficulties and our death.

We know we will suffer and that life will be difficult. But we also know that God follows us for good. The cross leads us to be overwhelmed by the goodness of God. Jesus had advanced knowledge of his suffering and he endured it.

We’re not to be ignorant of the inevitability of today’s or tomorrow’s suffering but we are to endure in Christ.

We even have been given a look into heaven and that is to influence our daily thinking and living.

”’...Do not fear what you are about to suffer. Behold, the devil is about to throw some of you into prison, that you may be tested, and for ten days you will have tribulation. Be faithful unto death, and I will give you the crown of life. He who has an ear, let him hear what the Spirit says to the churches. The one who conquers will not be hurt by the second death.’
(Revelation 2)

Di

I wonder if some, knowing the good that was certain to happen to them in the future, would just be lazy and not work for it, because it was a certainty?

Thanks for this Scott. I’ve been enjoying Flash Forward as well and was struck by how excellent a sermon illustration it made. In a way the whole premise raises very starkly the question which lies behind much of the Bible- how should one live now, in light of what we know about the future? Given that we have been given a reliable insight into the fact that a judgment is coming, and also a new heaven and earth where when we look back the trials of this life will seem like a this “light momentary affliction” in comparison to “an eternal weight of glory”... the answer seems pretty clear!

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Paul is one of the Staff Editors at Matthias Media. He is married to Cathy and has three fantastic kids. He loves student ministry, reading, writing music and playing the saxophone, and is looking forward to meeting Jesus face to face.

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