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Morning Bells; Or, Waking Thoughts for Little Ones

Chapter 47: Doing God's Will.
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About This Book

The collection offers short morning devotions for children, each built around a Bible verse and a brief explanatory reflection that links scriptural truth to daily conduct. Entries present Jesus as a childlike example, encourage trust, prayer, obedience, selflessness, and moral growth, and give simple practical prompts for living faith during the day. Arranged as numbered daily meditations, the pieces seek to rouse young readers from sleep into active discipleship, combining gentle admonition with comforting promises and concrete applications suitable for family or personal use.

21. Twenty-first Day.

Doing God's Will.

"Teach me to do Thy will."--Ps. cxliii. 10.

When you see some one doing with very great delight some beautiful and pleasant piece of work, have you not thought, "I should like to be able to do that!" and perhaps you have said, "Please, teach me how to do it."

Can you think of anything pleasanter to do than what the very angels are full of delight in doing? Can you think of anything more beautiful to do than what is done in the "pleasant land," the beautiful home above? Can you fancy anything more interesting to do than what the dwellers there will never get tired of doing for thousands of millions of years? Would you not like to be taught to do it too?--to begin the pleasant and beautiful and most interesting work now, instead of waiting till you are grown up, and then perhaps never learning it at all, because it was put off now? Then pray this little prayer this morning with all your heart, "Teach me to do Thy will." For it is His will that is the happiest work above, and the very happiest thing to do here below.

What is His will? The Prayer-Book version of this Psalm tells you very simply and sweetly. It says, "Teach me to do the thing that pleaseth Thee." So doing God's will is just doing the things, one by one, that please Him.

Why did David ask this? He goes on to say why--"For Thou art my God." If God is really our God, we too shall wish to do the thing that pleaseth Him. David did not think he could do it of himself, for he says next, "Let Thy loving Spirit lead me." That loving Spirit will lead you too, dear child, and show you how beautiful and grand God's will is, and make you long to do it always, and teach you to do it. So that even on earth you may begin to do what the angels are doing in heaven!

"It is but very little
  For Him that I can do,
Then let me seek to serve Him,
  My earthly journey through;
And, without sigh or murmur,
  To do His holy will;
And in my daily duties
  His wise commands fulfill."