We prayed about it. We discussed it. My friend had one desire; I had a different one.
"Okay, let's settle the issue the way the early Church settled matters
when an agreement could not be achieved. Let's flip a coin."
"You must be joking!" my friend lamented.
"No, the early Church cast lots often to determine a course of direction
or even select the disciple who would take Judas' place."
"Okay," my friend agreed.
We flipped the coin and the matter was quickly settled.
In the Old Testament there are many examples of casting lots for
determining a decision. We hear little of this method today. Most of us
do not want to release the decision process to this seemingly "flippant"
process; yet the Lord says, "The lot is cast into the lap, but its
every decision is from the Lord" (Prov. 16:33).
Flipping a coin is the equivalent to casting a lot. It removes our own
opinions and leaves the final outcome to the Lord. Pray before you take
such an action. It will surprise you who is willing to submit a decision
to the Lord and who isn't. It removes the element of control from both
parties.
I believe the Lord would first have us make decisions through agreement
and continued prayer for the decision. However, there are times when
this approach can be the quickest and simplest. It removes each person's
temptation to lord it over the other. Cast the lot and settle the
dispute.
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