24 Hours

Watch Face for Blog 2Waiting is tough…sometimes beyond tough. But the best way for us to wait and not completely lose our sanity is focusing on today…the 24 hours right in front of us. If I am having a hard time with even 24 hours, I have been known to shrink that down to 12 hours, or 1 hour, or heck, on a bad day 1 minute!

When I focus on my 24 hour period, I don’t get overwhelmed by what may or may not come, how it will all work out, or all the time that has passed. I focus on today, and living today to its’ absolute fullest.

And that’s what God calls us to do right? Live life to its fullest today, while we let Him take care of the future and working out His promises for us. And He will! We can trust Him to do all He has said that He would. He is the great Promise keeper.

So, for today…I will keep my eyes on Him and living out my next 24 hours with all the passion and zest for life that I can muster up!

 

“Wait” Poem by Russell Kelfer

Watch Face for Blog 2

 Sometimes you run across a poem that just inspires and encourages you to continue to hold on to the Lord and all of His promises. This was one such poem for me!

Wait

By Russell Kelfer, copyright 1995

Desperately, helplessly, longingly, I cried.
Quietly, patiently, lovingly, He replied.
I pleaded, and I wept for a clue to my fate,
And the Master so gently said, “Child, you must wait.”
 
“Wait? Your 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.
 
“My future, and all to which I can relate
Hangs in the balance, and you tell me ‘wait’?
I’m needing a ‘yes’, a go-ahead sign,
Or even a ‘no’, to which I can resign.
 
“And Lord, you have promised that if we believe, 
We need but 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 once again, “You must 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, darken the sun,
Raise the dead, cause the mountains to run.
 
“All you see I could give, and pleased you would be.
You would 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 was all you could see.
 
“You would never experience that fullness of love
As 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 in 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.
 
“And you never would know, should your pain quickly flee,
What it means that ‘My grace is sufficient for thee.’
Yes, your dreams for that loved one o’ernight could come true,
But the loss! if you lost what I’m doing in you!
 
“So be silent, my child, and in time you will see
That the greatest of gifts is to get to know Me.
And though oft’ may My answers seem terribly late, 
My most precious answer of all….is still…wait.” 

Cycle of Desires: Waiting – Part 3 of 5

Cycle of DesiresWaiting

            God’s Promises are a signed, sealed guarantee, but often so is the waiting that accompanies them.  Like we see with Abraham, sometimes God gives us promises far in advance of their fulfillment to give us hope for our future and stability during our present pain.  But He still makes us wait and wait and wait for them – to the point we honestly believe our hearts will explode with anxiety or pain.  See, it’s in our hearts where our deepest desires reside and therefore it is the most vulnerable of places for us.

But because those desires are in the most vulnerable of places and are often the most important to us, they are also of utmost importance to God.  And He is never inactive in our waiting time, even when He calls us to be still.  In fact, He absolutely loves to work for those who will wait for Him.

Although He may not explain all of His purposes to us as He has us in this season of waiting, there is always a reason.  I am sure that Abraham would have gladly relived each and every day of waiting, knowing the joy that his son Isaac brought him for the rest of his days.  Even though the waiting felt like an eternity, Isaac was worth waiting for.

God has something worth us waiting for too.  I was driving to a function the other day, and praying while I drove.  Much of my time spent driving involves me praying that I don’t get a ticket, but on this particular trip I was bearing my soul to the Lord in terms of my desires and longing for a family.  And that’s when the Lord laid it on my heart, “I am making you wait because there is something worth waiting for.”  There is something worth waiting for. It’s kind of hard to argue with that, and so I have no choice but to wait.

There are days I feel much like I am sure Sarai felt….a bit past my prime in terms of the timeline of my hopes and dreams…a bit on the wrong side of where I would like to be.  But that’s when God does something to remind me of the promises He has given me.  That’s when He reminds me that my waiting will produce a joy that I will carry with me for the rest of my life.

 

Encouraging Quotes on Waiting

Trust in His timing Rely on His Promises PoemBiblically, waiting is not just something we have to do until we get what we want. Waiting is part of the process of becoming what God wants us to be. – John Ortberg

To wait on God means to pause and soberly consider our own inadequacy and the Lord’s all-sufficiency, and to seek counsel and help from the Lord, and to hope in Him (Psalm 33:20-22; Isa. 8:17)… The folly of not waiting for God is that we forfeit the blessing of having God work for us. The evil of not waiting on God is that we oppose God’s will to exalt Himself in mercy.- John Piper

Teach us, O Lord, the disciplines of patience, for to wait is often harder than to work. – Peter Marshall

What then are we to do about our problems? We must learn to live with them until such time as God delivers us from them…we must pray for grace to endure them without murmuring. Problems patiently endured will work for our spiritual perfecting. They harm us only when we resist them or endure them unwillingly.- A.W. Tozer 

 

Do you have any you could share that have been an encouragement to you?