In the gospel of Luke, God and man are heard asking precisely the same question. Let us briefly consider both.
In the twelfth chapter we are introduced to a rich farmer. God is seen providentially crowning all this man's former prosperity with the bestowal of a harvest so richly plentiful that he has actually no barn-room for the over-flowing abundance. He looks round his waving fields, he carefully gauges the capacity of his existing storehouses, and then asks the significant question, "What shall I do?" The answer that follows shows only too well what his heart is set upon. Four times in a few brief sentences he says, "I will"; but it is all in connection with his own easy-going, self-indulgent purposes. No less than ten times in ten short lines he uses the significant words "I" and "my". As for God, He is not in all his
8 pages Pamphlet Author: G. Cutting