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If God Knows the Future, Are We Really Free? | Hard Questions, Real Answers

  • Table of Contents:

    • God Knows Your Future

    • God Is in Control

    • Your Choices Still Matter

    • Choosing Jesus Every Day

    • Finding Peace in an Uncertain Future

    How you view the future shapes how you live in the present. That was the heart behind this week’s message in our Hard Questions, Real Answers series at Arroyo Church in Livermore, CA.

    Many people wrestle with questions like: If God already knows everything, do my choices actually matter? Or, If God is in control, am I truly free? These are not just philosophical questions—they impact our anxiety, our purpose, and the way we approach everyday life.

    In a culture that often swings between hopeless determinism and overwhelming self-reliance, Scripture offers something deeper and more hopeful. The Bible reveals a God who fully knows the future, sovereignly rules over creation, and still invites people to make real choices with eternal significance.

    For those navigating the spiritual desert of the Bay Area, this truth is refreshing like a river in dry land: you are not abandoned to chaos, nor crushed by the pressure of controlling everything yourself. God is present, powerful, and loving.

    God Knows Your Future

    Psalm 139 reminds us that God knows every detail of our lives before they ever happen. He knows our thoughts, our words, our actions, and every day ordained for us.

    That means your future is not foreign to God.

    While we experience life moment by moment, God sees the full story at once. The message compared this to watching a movie alongside the director. The audience experiences suspense and surprise, but the director already knows how every scene unfolds.

    The beauty of this truth is not merely that God knows everything—it’s that He loves us fully despite knowing everything.

    God knew every mistake, every failure, every sin we would ever commit, and He still chose the cross. That’s the depth of His love.

    In a world where people fear being truly known and rejected, the gospel says something radically different: God knows you completely and still calls you His beloved.

    God Is in Control

    Jesus taught that not even a sparrow falls to the ground apart from the Father’s care.

    This means God is not only aware of what happens in our lives—He is sovereign over it. Nothing happens outside of His power. Sometimes God actively causes events to happen, and other times He allows things within His greater purposes.

    That doesn’t mean we will always understand why difficult things happen. The message acknowledged the reality of suffering and human limitation. We are finite people trying to understand an infinite God.

    But here’s the encouragement: if God values even the smallest sparrow, how much more does He care for you?

    Jesus gave His life for humanity. The cross reveals our worth to God. Because of that, believers can trust that their lives are held securely in His hands.

    This truth changes how we face fear.

    Most anxiety comes from uncertainty about the future:

    • Will things work out?

    • Will I find purpose?

    • Will God provide?

    • What if everything falls apart?

    The answer isn’t that Christians suddenly know the future. The answer is that we know the One who holds the future.

    That perspective brings peace in the middle of uncertainty.

    Your Choices Still Matter

    One of the most important moments in the message came from Joshua 24:15:

    “Choose for yourselves this day whom you will serve…”

    The Bible never treats human choices as meaningless illusions. Instead, Scripture consistently calls people to repentance, obedience, faith, and surrender.

    God’s sovereignty and human responsibility exist together.

    Joshua challenged Israel to make a decision:

    • Serve the Lord

    • Or serve false gods

    That same decision confronts every person today.

    Modern idols may not look like ancient statues, but they are still powerful:

    • Success

    • Pleasure

    • Status

    • Approval

    • Comfort

    • Self-centered living

    The message emphasized that sin often feels good temporarily, but ultimately leads to destruction.

    Following Jesus may not always be easy, but it leads to eternal life, peace, and purpose.

    The Choices You Make Shape Your Life

    Galatians 6 teaches that people reap what they sow.

    The seeds planted today become the harvest experienced tomorrow.

    • Seeds of bitterness produce division.

    • Seeds of laziness produce stagnation.

    • Seeds of integrity produce trust.

    • Seeds of faithfulness produce spiritual growth.

    This principle applies to relationships, careers, spiritual life, and personal character.

    The message challenged listeners to take responsibility for their own choices instead of blaming others or carrying responsibility for everyone around them.

    Every day presents a choice:

    • Will we trust Jesus?

    • Or will we live on our own terms?

    Choosing Jesus Every Day

    The sermon closed with the invitation found in John 3:16:

    “Whoever believes in Him shall not perish but have eternal life.”

    That word whoever matters deeply.

    No matter your past, your failures, your doubts, or your background, Jesus invites you to trust Him.

    Following Christ is more than intellectual agreement. It means surrendering your life to Him daily. It means believing that His way leads to life—even when it’s harder than the world’s shortcuts.

    And the good news is this:

    • God already knows your story.

    • God is still in control.

    • God still loves you.

    • And God still invites you to choose Him.

      Conclusion:
      In the middle of life’s uncertainty, Christians can live with confidence because the future is not random. God sees it, holds it, and works through it.

    At Arroyo Church, we believe Jesus is still bringing hope to people across Livermore and the Bay Area spiritual desert. He offers peace for anxious hearts, purpose for wandering souls, and eternal life for anyone willing to trust Him.

    The question is not whether God knows the future. The question is whether we will trust Him with ours.

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