Why God Makes Us Wait
Why God Makes Us Wait by Ben Fronczek
Over the years I’ve come to realize that
the most important lessons in life, those which we learn the most from,
are lessons that are learned when life seems the most difficult, or the
lessons we learn when great demands are made of us, or when we are the
saddest. Some have even given this form of education a nickname. They
call it ‘the School of Hard Knocks.’
And this does not change because you become
a Christian. I don’t know if it’s true or not but a scholar by the
name of A.W. Tozer once wrote: “I don’t believe God can bless a man until He hurts him deeply.”
Part of me doesn’t like what he is saying
here in that quote. None of us want to be hurt deeply or broken, but on
the other hand if you take the time to study the lives of great men and
women in the Bible it doesn’t take too long to see that God has allowed
men and women to go through the School of Hard Knocks time and time again, usually for a good reason.
One of most difficult times of learning, a
time almost all of us have trouble with, is when we have to wait.
Waiting on others, waiting for something to happen, waiting on God,
waiting for Him to answer things we prayed about over, and over, and
over. We want things to get better. Some are waiting for a better job.
Some are wanting and waiting a significant other or a marriage proposal.
Some are wanting and waiting for a child, or their own home, or for
their adult children to grow up… and the list goes on. We want what we
want when we want it and that’s usually, right away. And when we don’t
get what we want, we cannot help but wonder why, and sometime get we
frustrated.
This past week as I thought about those
great men and women in the Bible and I realized that they too had to
wait, sometimes for many, many years.
For example:
God had promised Abraham and Sarah a son
through whom He would build a nation of people, who would eventually
possess the promise land, and through whom would come one whom would be a
blessing to all nations (Jesus). But do you remember how long that
they had to wait for that child? Isaac wasn’t born until many years
after that promise was made when Abraham was 80 years old. I wonder how
many times Abraham and Sarah asked God, “Lord when is this going to
happen?”
Joseph was put in prison on false charges
for more than two full years on false charges. He shouldn’t have been
there. I wonder how many times he asked, “Why Lord?”
After the Israelites moved down into Egypt,
all went well as long as the Egyptians remembered Joseph and the great
things he had done to save them. They grew in numbers but were later
enslaved and were treated harshly.
After Moses came on the scene at the age
of 40 he saw the oppression of his fellow Hebrews and wanted to do
something about it, but after killing an Egyptian, he fled into the
desert and would have to wait some 40 more years before God told him to
go free the people. Not until he was 80. God eventually sent him back to
free the Israelites after they lived there some 430 years.
I wondered how many times over those 40 years in the desert Moses asked “Why Lord, When are you going to free your people?
Because of their sin the Israelites would
have to wait a whole generation, forty years more before God would let
them enter the Promise Land.
Not only did Sarah have to endure and wait
many years barren before she had a child, but so too did many other
famous women like, Rachael, Joseph’s mom, and then Samson’s mom (Judges
13), Hannah mother of Samuel, and then later Elizabeth, John the
Baptist’s mom. I wonder how many times they asked God for a baby and why
they couldn’t have one?
After being anointed King of Israel by the
prophet Samuel, David would have to wait many hard years before he would
sit upon the throne of Saul.
Israel would remain in Babylon in captivity some 70 years before they were again set free.
Paul who waited about 6 or more years before he went on his very first missionary journey. And later he write to the Romans that we and all of creation are waiting for renewal of all things (Romans 8:22-23)
Wait, wait, wait! Some of
you know what that’s like. You have something on your heart and you
have brought it to God and prayed about it over, and over, and over
again, but nothing seems to happen. It’s as though your prayer has
fallen on deaf ears. But let me reassure you, it has not.
God has heard every word, every prayer
you’ve made and I believe He wants us to remain faithful, but for
whatever reason He also wants us to just wait.
Things are happening that you just may not be able to see right now
I’m not one much for reading poetry but I read one this past week that sheds some insight on this topic. Here it is:
Wait by Russell Kelfer
Desperately, helplessly, longingly, I cried;
Quietly, patiently, lovingly, God replied.
I pled and I wept for a clue to my fate . . .
And the Master so gently said, “Wait.”
Quietly, patiently, lovingly, God replied.
I pled and I wept for a clue to my fate . . .
And the Master so gently said, “Wait.”
“Wait? you say wait?” my indignant reply.
“Lord, I need answers, I need to know why!
Is your hand shortened? Or have you not heard?
By faith I have asked, and I’m claiming your Word.
“Lord, I need answers, I need to know why!
Is your hand shortened? Or have you not heard?
By faith I have asked, and I’m claiming your Word.
“My future and all to which I relate
Hangs in the balance, and you tell me to wait?
I’m needing a ‘yes’, a go-ahead sign,
Or even a ‘no’ to which I can resign.
Hangs in the balance, and you tell me to wait?
I’m needing a ‘yes’, a go-ahead sign,
Or even a ‘no’ to which I can resign.
“You promised, dear Lord, that if we believe,
We need but to ask, and we shall receive.
And Lord I’ve been asking, and this is my cry:
I’m weary of asking! I need a reply.”
We need but to ask, and we shall receive.
And Lord I’ve been asking, and this is my cry:
I’m weary of asking! I need a reply.”
Then quietly, softly, I learned of my fate,
As my Master replied again, “Wait.”
So I slumped in my chair, defeated and taut,
And grumbled to God, “So, I’m waiting for what?”
As my Master replied again, “Wait.”
So I slumped in my chair, defeated and taut,
And grumbled to God, “So, I’m waiting for what?”
He seemed then to kneel, and His eyes met with mine . . .
and He tenderly said, “I could give you a sign.
I could shake the heavens and darken the sun.
I could raise the dead and cause mountains to run.
and He tenderly said, “I could give you a sign.
I could shake the heavens and darken the sun.
I could raise the dead and cause mountains to run.
“I could give all you seek and pleased you would be.
You’d have what you want, but you wouldn’t know Me.
You’d not know the depth of my love for each saint.
You’d not know the power that I give to the faint.
You’d have what you want, but you wouldn’t know Me.
You’d not know the depth of my love for each saint.
You’d not know the power that I give to the faint.
“You’d not learn to see through clouds of despair;
You’d not learn to trust just by knowing I’m there.
You’d not know the joy of resting in Me
When darkness and silence are all you can see.
You’d not learn to trust just by knowing I’m there.
You’d not know the joy of resting in Me
When darkness and silence are all you can see.
“You’d never experience the fullness of love
When the peace of My spirit descends like a dove.
You would know that I give, and I save, for a start,
But you’d not know the depth of the beat of My heart.
When the peace of My spirit descends like a dove.
You would know that I give, and I save, for a start,
But you’d not know the depth of the beat of My heart.
“The glow of my comfort late into the night,
The faith that I give when you walk without sight.
The depth that’s beyond getting just what you ask
From an infinite God who makes what you have last.
The faith that I give when you walk without sight.
The depth that’s beyond getting just what you ask
From an infinite God who makes what you have last.
“You’d never know, should your pain quickly flee,
What it means that My grace is sufficient for thee.
Yes, your dearest dreams overnight would come true,
But, oh, the loss, if you missed what I’m doing in you.
What it means that My grace is sufficient for thee.
Yes, your dearest dreams overnight would come true,
But, oh, the loss, if you missed what I’m doing in you.
“So, be silent, my child, and in time you will see
That the greatest of gifts is to truly know me.
And though oft My answers seem terribly late,
My most precious answer of all is still . . . Wait.”
That the greatest of gifts is to truly know me.
And though oft My answers seem terribly late,
My most precious answer of all is still . . . Wait.”
Closing:
Maybe today you are feeling the pain or
frustration of an unanswered prayer, and having to wait for something to
happen that you want to happen right now. You prayed about that
something, and prayed
about it, and prayed about it, and still nothing happens. It seems like
no answer is not coming and you don’t understand why. I think we’ve all
been there; at least some of the greatest men and women in the Bible
have.
My encouragement today is simply this: Don’t give up on God.
Trust Him. Trust in His timing. Just like He worked out things for the
men and women we read about in the Bible, trust that He is working
something out for you as the days, weeks and maybe years go by.
Even though you know these truths some will
still get impatient and frustrated with having to wait. Some will even
try to take matters into their own hands like Abraham and Sarah did when
they tried to have a son through Sarah’s maidservant. Things don’t
always turn out for the best when we do this, just like it didn’t for
them. If anything draw closer to God because His
grace is sufficient, and He will bless you according to His will which
is far superior to our own. And one way or the other you will
eventually see your prayer answered just like those men and women of
old, and maybe just like you have seen in your own past.
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