6 Means Through Which God May Choose to Guide You in the New Year

6 Means Through Which God May Choose to Guide You in the New Year

Every January 1st, I am greeted by the same bracing truth as I turn again to the first page of my well-worn flip calendar of Elisabeth Elliot quotes:

Lord, give me a quiet heart
That doesn’t need to understand,
But, confident, walks forward in
The darkness, guided by your hand.”

In a sense, everyone steps into the darkness of the unknown at the beginning of a new year, and the more people we love, the more vulnerable we seem to be.  We can’t control the choices of others; we can’t foresee the twistings and turnings of the details of our days, of our employment situation, of our health. We can’t shield our loved ones from the forces of nature or the consequences of their actions.

Although Elisabeth was a young woman when she penned these words, she had already grasped an important truth that thrums through my bones at the beginning of every year:  we are walking into the unknown, but even so, we can rest in the knowledge—the deep and abiding confidence—that God wants to guide us, and the unknown is well-known to Him.

Where then does wisdom come from, and where is the source of understanding? God understands the way to it; He alone knows its source; For He can see to the ends of the earth, and He surveys everything under heaven,” (Job 28:20, 23, 24 NEB).

God, in His wisdom, wants to guide us far more than we want to follow!  He doesn’t simply e-mail a set of directions to us or give us advice from a distance.  He has promised to be a Guide.

Are you in a place of struggle and questioning at the end of a year that has seen more question marks than exclamation points, more misty fog than lighthouses? Are there days when you wonder if you have taken a wrong turn somewhere? Are you waiting for clear guidance in an important decision?

To be honest, when I have a decision to make, I want skywriting.  When it’s time to buy a car, I want to see, “Buy the blue Ford,” hanging in the heavens.    Notice, however, that whenever supernatural guidance was given in the Bible (pillars of cloud and fire, talking donkeys, angels, dreams, and visions), it was not usually asked for, but came at God’s discretion.  He is free to communicate by whatever means He chooses.

With this in mind, I want to read His promises of guidance with confidence and to sense His leading, trusting His work in my life through His Spirit to guide my steps and — perhaps even more important — to set me on the right path when I make a wrong turn.

Providing a list of “tried and true methods for finding the will of God” or prescribing how God will work in a life is presumptuous—and probably harmful. Our God is in the heavens, and He does whatever He pleases.  However, an understanding of how God has worked in the past helps discern how He may work in the future, so I offer here six means through which God may choose to guide us in the new year:

An understanding of how God has worked in the past helps discern how He may work in the future, so I offer today six means through which God may choose to guide us in the new year.

1. Duty

“If any man will do His will, he shall know . . .,” John 7:17. God guides those who obey. If I’m not doing what I know of God’s revealed will, I should not expect further guidance. George MacDonald said, “If any man’s will is to do His will, he shall know . . . Obedience is the opener of eyes.”1

The truth is that much of what God requires of us involves lots of “mundane faithfulness” to daily tasks. David’s harp playing skills that gave him an audience with King Saul were gained in a field watching sheep. Samuel faithfully served in the temple, and I’m sure that Matthew had no idea that he would be called to the life of a disciple on the last day of his tenure as a tax collector.

2. Timing

The prophet Habakkuk made no great claims to a full understanding of the ways of God, but one thing he knew: God has an exquisite sense of timing:

Then the LORD answered me and said,
‘Write the vision
And make it plain on tablets.
That he may run who reads it.
For the vision is yet for an appointed time;
But at the end it will speak and it will not lie.
Though it tarries, wait for it;
Because it will surely come,
It will not tarry.’”     (Habakkuk 2:2,3 NKJV)

Waiting is the hardest assignment of all in the discernment of God’s will. Even Ruth, in all her faithfulness and obedience, felt the weight of it and received this counsel from Naomi: “Sit still, my daughter, until you know how the matter will fall,” Ruth 3:18.

3. Relationships

We are subject to authority and, indeed, obligated to serve and to be sensitive to one another in the body of Christ. Fulfillment of my responsibilities to the people God has placed in my life has often served as a beacon by which God has guided me. For example, should I accept a speaking engagement that conflicts with an important event in my family or at my own church? Probably not.

A word from an employer, a co-worker, a sibling, a parent, or a friend may be used to influence and guide us. When seeking guidance on a matter, it is wise to take godly counsel and to pray with a sister in Christ, “for where two or three are gathered together in My name, I am there in the midst of them,” Matthew 18:20.

4. Giftedness

It is no accident that every Christian possesses a particular palette of abilities and spiritual gifts. Countless times, I have heard my husband counsel our sons, “Whatever you have in your hand, God will use,” and that’s not a thought that’s original with him. God said the same thing to Moses about a simple rod.

5. Desires

It gets tricky here because we are fallen creatures, barely knowing our own motives, but desires placed prayerfully before God can be a trustworthy guide. The prayer life of the Apostle Paul demonstrates his conviction that it was best to submit his yearnings to God, for even a longing to visit Rome for the establishment of the believers there was made subject to God’s approval.

6. Circumstances

There was nothing glamorous about the circumstances surrounding Saul’s being anointed King over Israel. Remember? He was in a predicament because his Father’s donkeys had wandered off. He was out looking for them, but what he found instead was God’s servant Samuel, who had explicit directives that Saul was to be God’s man on the throne. Our circumstances are part of the “all things” that God promises to work for our good and his glory in Romans 8:28. Often, we do not recognize the hand of God until, in retrospect, we look back on the events of our lives and see how He has led.

Coming into 2026, I want to be attentive to God’s guiding hand, to maintain a quiet heart that waits for Him to shed light on the next step. My prayer is that my confidence in His love will overcome my need for white-knuckle control over the road map; that my “eye-opening” obedience to His directives will enhance my sensitivity to His voice; and that, walking into the murky unknown, I will find grace to live in the confidence that waits for the Word of God:

And your ears shall hear a word behind you, saying, ’This is the way, walk in it,’ when you turn to the right or when you turn to the left,” (Isaiah 30:21 ESV).

Holding You in the Light,


Our circumstances are part of the “all things” that God promises to work for our good and his glory. Often, we do not recognize the hand of God until, in retrospect, we look back on the events of our lives and see how He has led.

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  1. C. S. Lewis, ed., George MacDonald: An Anthology: 365 Readings (New York: HarperCollins, 2001), 33. ↩︎

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15 thoughts on “6 Means Through Which God May Choose to Guide You in the New Year”

  1. I’m with you – I’d love to have a bright neon sign addressed to me specifically when I need God’s leading on a particular matter! He does speak to us, but we do need to walk in the light of what we already know and get in the practice of seeing his hand at work and hearing what he says. I love the means you’ve shared here and the encouragement that comes with that! Thank you for sharing these devotionals with Scripture and a Snapshot – I appreciate you! (And I very much like your YouVersion plans, by the way)

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  2. Guidance comes at “God’s discretion” – oh, how that takes control of so much out of our hands and requires trusting God’s good discretion! I think our culture has turned its back on the “mundane” life – yet, that is from where the goodness in life comes. There’s so much richness in your post Michele – mundane’s worldly definition camouflages an important lesson about where God places His blessings. I think I have decided I would rather my sons lived a mundane life faithful to God rather than seeking power, prestige and fame. Mundane is richer by far.

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  3. Love this – “Obedience is the opener of eyes.”

    He guides who obeys. Why should He say more if we didn’t obey the first thing we were told?

    I used to work with a youth pastor who would joke every morning as he came into the office, “Did my fax from God come in yet? He hasn’t told me what I should do yet.” (That joke shows how old I am … faxes are almost obsolete, and the youth pastor now plays Santa Claus at community events using his own white hair and beard!)

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  4. Yes, sometimes I think it would be helpful if God could just write it in the sky! I appreciate the reminder that he is even more willing to guide than we are to follow.

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