We're all familiar with the quote Jesus makes in the Garden in Luke 22, He was asking the Father to let the torture of the crucifixion pass Him by. He said, -Not my will but yours be done.- We're familiar with it-but do we understand the scope of its importance and how it can change our lives- Jesus meant it when He said he was willing to abandon His will, for God's Let's see how a better understanding of God's will might have changed the life of one of Judah's first kings, Rehoboam.