BREAK DOWN THE WALL
Maybe the best obstruction to seeing a greater amount of God's will for us is our own fascination, even fixation, with us — with ourselves. In the following verse — directly in the wake of saying, " . . . that by testing you may recognize what is the will of God, what is great and worthy and immaculate" — Paul says, "For by the elegance given to me I say to everybody among you not to consider himself more very than he should might suspect, however to think with calm judgment, each as indicated by the measure of confidence that God has alloted" (Romans 12:3). What is the divider amongst us and God's will? We are. Our pride. Our reasoning of ourselves more very than we should.
In the event that we needed to stay adjusted to this world, at that point we should see and assess everything, including God himself, through ourselves — in light of how he (or she, or it) benefits, certifies, and features us. In any case, in the event that we need to oppose being complied with this world, and to recharge our brains, adjusting our wills rather to God's will, we won't have a favorable opinion of ourselves. We'll start to perceive how little we are, and endeavor to make our minor, defective, forgettable presence feature the monstrous, faultless, and endless greatness of God. Furthermore, we will be more joyful before his wonderfulness than we ever were seeking after our own.
In the event that we need to climb the unclimbable piles of God's magnificence and start to observe his will, we should kick the bucket to our feeling of our own greatness. We should break free from our fantasies about the delights and acknowledgment of our little world, and fix the eyes of our souls on the bigness and excellence of our God.