
"Life can only be understood backwards; but it must be lived forwards."
When I first read that quote years ago, I thought it was clever - Now I think it is true.
The older I get, the more I realize how little I understood what God was doing while I was living through it. After six decades- I can look back and see patterns, connections, providences, and lessons that were completely invisible to me at the time.
That is probably one reason why discussions about calling can become so frustrating.
Most of us want clarity about the future. We want a map. We want certainty.
We want God to show us the next ten steps before we take the first one.
But that is rarely how He seems to work.
Instead, He usually gives enough light for the next step and asks us to trust Him with the rest.
One of the sayings Coach Bear Bryant used frequently was "Expect the unexpected." What made that interesting was that it came from someone who prepared for everything. Nothing happened accidentally in his program. Situations were rehearsed. Contingencies were discussed. Players were trained to think ahead.
And yet even Bryant understood that no amount of preparation could account for every twist and turn of a football game. Life is the same way.
When I was younger, I thought calling was mostly about discovering the right path and staying on it. Looking back now, I think calling has involved far more surprises than I ever expected.
If you had asked me at age twenty-five where I would be at sixty-two, I would have missed almost every major turn in the road. I would not have predicted Nashville. I certainly would not have predicted leaving Nashville. I would not have predicted returning to Briarwood. I would not have predicted moving from coaching into administration.
And I definitely would not have predicted spending part of my days thinking about maintenance schedules, HVAC systems, construction projects, and the relentless reality of entropy.
Yet here I am. And when I look backward, I can see God's hand in all of it.
Not perfectly. Not exhaustively. There are still chapters I do not fully understand. There are still disappointments I would not have chosen. There are still questions I carry.
But I can see enough to trust Him with the parts I do not understand.
That is one reason I think Christians sometimes become too anxious about discovering "God's will." We want certainty about assignments when God is often more concerned about faithfulness.
Os Guinness repeatedly makes the point that our primary calling is always to Christ Himself. Our secondary callings may change many times over the course of a lifetime.
Here is what I am trying to press so far as we tune up- as we rest and reflect- as we seek restoration and recovery (the R&R can be a lot of things!)
The assignment changes. The calling does not.
The location changes. The calling does not.
The title changes. The calling does not.
When Peter writes in 1 Peter 3 to "always be prepared," we often think immediately about apologetics and defending the faith. That is certainly part of the passage. But the context is larger than that. Peter is writing to people whose lives were being disrupted by suffering, opposition, uncertainty, and circumstances they would not have chosen.
In other words, people whose plans were not unfolding as expected.
His encouragement is not to panic but to honor Christ as Lord and remain faithful.
That sounds simple until life becomes complicated. I was thinking- We all love the “Providence of God” until it punches us in the mouth! We obey God in the “Yes” moments, but act like whinny b****t**es when it doesn’t.
One of the things I have learned over the years is that God often prepares us for assignments long before we realize why He is doing it. Skills learned in one season become useful in another. Relationships formed decades earlier suddenly matter. Hard experiences that seemed pointless at the time become sources of wisdom later.
At the moment, those experiences often feel disconnected. Looking backward, they begin to fit together.
I liken it to working like crazy and as you do it, you are kicking up dust. That dust is everywhere and you can't see anything. Work, work, work... then you fall down exhausted and feel like all is lost. While you lay there... the dust settles and you look back- and what you have built takes your breath away... you didn''t feel progress, but now you SEE it. and now it's time to begin again.
That is the backward look- not like Lot's wife.. it isn't disobeying Jesus when the hand is on the plow- this is just 'getting my bearings'.
That does not mean every event makes sense. It does not mean every tragedy can be neatly explained. It certainly does not mean every disappointment was enjoyable.
It simply means that God is often doing more than we can see.
Oswald Chambers once wrote:
"The one aim of the call of God is the satisfaction of God, not a call to do something for Him."
I have thought about that quote often over the years.
Many of us become consumed with trying to discover the assignment. We want to know where we are supposed to go, what we are supposed to do, and how everything is supposed to work out.
Meanwhile, God is inviting us into something deeper than vocational clarity.
He is inviting us into fellowship with Himself.
Perhaps that is why so much of life only makes sense in reverse.
We live, trust, obey forward. - But every once in a while, God allows us to look backward and catch a glimpse of His faithfulness.
And when we do, it becomes a little easier to trust Him with the next unexpected turn in the road.
As part of this June Tune-Up, it may be worth spending a little time looking backward before looking forward.
Most of us spend a great deal of energy trying to predict what comes next. Perhaps a better exercise is to ask where we have already seen God's hand at work.
What are some unexpected turns that ultimately became blessings?
What disappointments redirected you toward something better?
What relationships, opportunities, or hardships seemed confusing at the time but make more sense now?
Where have you seen God's providence most clearly?
And perhaps the hardest question of all:
What part of your future are you struggling to trust Him with today?
Take some time this week to write down a few of those moments. You may discover that the same God who was faithful in the chapters you now understand is also faithful in the chapters you are still living.
Link: Looking Backwards
At twenty-five I had a plan,
A straight-line dream all mapped by hand,
Certain where the road would bend,
Certain how the story'd end.
I thought calling was a destination,
A finish line I had to find,
Never knew that God was working
Through a thousand turns behind.
Verse 2
Coach said, "Expect the unexpected,"
Every bounce and every break,
You can practice every situation,
Still not know what turn it'll take.
Life has felt a lot like that now,
Years of plans and sudden turns,
Some lessons only make sense later,
Some truths are slow to learn.
Chorus
I can see it now looking backwards,
All the roads I never would have drawn,
Every closed door, every hard turn,
Every place I thought that You were wrong
I couldn't read the map while I was walking,
Couldn't see the reason for the rain,
But life makes sense looking backwards,
And faith keeps moving me forward again.
Verse 3
I never saw that loss coming,
Never saw myself in pain,
I left to conquer hills and mountains,
Never thought I'd come back home again.
And some days I laugh about it,
Some days I shake my head,
Thinking how the Lord kept writing
Chapters I would've never read.
Chorus
I can see it now looking backwards,
All the roads I never would have drawn,
Every closed door, every hard turn,
Every place I thought that You were wrong.
I couldn't read the map while I was walking,
Couldn't see the reason for the rain,
But life makes sense looking backwards,
And faith keeps moving me forward again.
Bridge
The title changed,
The town changed,
The work beneath my hands.
The faces changed,
The season changed,
The shape of all my plans.
But the call stayed,
The voice stayed,
The Shepherd stayed the same.
And after all these winding years,
He still calls me by name.
Chorus
Now I can see it looking backwards,
Though there's still some roads I don't understand,
Some prayers unanswered,
Some questions linger,
Still resting in Your hands.
And I may never know the reasons
For every valley, every pain,
But life makes sense looking backwards,
And faith keeps moving me forward again.
Outro
So I'll take the next step You give me,
Leave tomorrow where it belongs,
Trusting all the miles behind me
Prove You've led me all along.
Life is understood backwards,
But it's lived moving forward on.

