The God Who Makes All Things New: Biblical Resolutions for the Year Ahead
Isaiah 43:18-19 • Lamentations 3:22-23
New creation in Christ, spiritual resolutions rooted in Scripture, and the God who makes all things new
Dispensational / Prophetic
Biblical prophecy and God's unfolding plan
Forget the Former Things
The Rearview Mirror
A driving instructor tells every student the same thing: the rearview mirror is for glancing, not for staring. If you spend more time looking behind you than ahead of you, you will crash. The same principle applies to the spiritual life. God gave you memory so you could learn from the past — not so you could live in it. Some of you have been staring into the rearview mirror for years: replaying failures, nursing regrets, rehearsing what you should have said or done. God says: glance back to learn, but fix your eyes forward. I am doing a new thing. It is springing up right now. But you will miss it if you are staring at yesterday.
Source: Common pastoral illustration / driving analogy
New Every Morning
Pressing On Toward the Goal
Applications
- 1Write down one spiritual resolution — not a self-improvement goal, but a response to God's call. What is God nudging you toward? Name it. Write it down. Start this week.
- 2Practice daily renewal. Before checking your phone each morning, read one psalm or one chapter of the Gospels. Let God's new mercies be the first thing you receive each day.
- 3Identify what you need to leave behind. What failure, regret, or sin are you still carrying from last year? Confess it, release it, and receive the forgiveness that is already yours in Christ.
- 4Press on with one concrete step. Join a small group. Start tithing. Have a Gospel conversation. Sign up for a mission trip. Faith without action is dead — pick one action and do it this month.
Prayer Suggestions
- God of new beginnings, You are doing a new thing. Open our eyes to perceive it. Give us the courage to step into it.
- Thank You that Your mercies are new every morning. We do not need to earn a fresh start. You give one freely, every day, by grace.
- Help us forget what is behind — not to erase it, but to stop living there. The rearview mirror is for glancing. Our eyes belong on the road ahead.
- Press us onward and upward. We respond to Your call. We say yes to the new thing. Make us new creations — not just once, but daily, progressively, until we see You face to face. Amen.
Preaching Toolkit
Cast Away (2000)
Chuck Noland, stranded on a deserted island for four years, finally escapes and returns to civilization. Everything has changed. His old life is gone. He stands at a crossroads — literally — holding a package he never delivered, looking at roads stretching in every direction. He says: 'I know what I have to do now. I gotta keep breathing. Because tomorrow the sun will rise. Who knows what the tide could bring?' That is the posture of biblical hope at the New Year. The past is gone. The future is open. God's mercies are coming with the sunrise. And you do not know what the tide will bring — but you know the One who commands the tides.
3 Voices
Powered by LensLines™ — one-liners from every TheoLens™ tradition
"See, I am doing a new thing!" God is the subject. He is doing. He is making. Your job is not to manufacture the new thing. Your job is to perceive it and step into it.
You do not need January 1 to start over. Lamentations says God's mercies are new every morning. Every sunrise is a fresh start. Today is enough.
Secular resolutions fail because they run on willpower. Biblical resolutions run on the Holy Spirit. One of those fuel sources is infinite. Pick the right one.
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Frequently Asked Questions
How is a biblical resolution different from a secular resolution?
Secular resolutions are rooted in self-improvement and powered by willpower — which is why most fail by February. Biblical resolutions are responses to God's call, powered by the Holy Spirit, and grounded in the truth that God is already doing a new thing. The focus shifts from 'what I can do for myself' to 'what God is doing in me.'
What does Isaiah 43:18-19 mean by 'forget the former things'?
God is not commanding amnesia. He is telling Israel — and us — to stop living in the past. Stop letting yesterday's failures define today's possibilities. God is doing a new thing, and you will miss it if you are staring into the rearview mirror. The command is about posture and focus, not memory erasure.
This Sermon in Other Traditions
See how 16 other Christian traditions approach the new year's sermon.