Originally published Monday, 27 November 2017.
I drive up to a stop sign and hate that the car in front of me lingers an extra ten seconds. I go to grab some food at Chipotle and find myself annoyed at the gap in the line being caused by that texter. I go to the grocery store and size up the length of the lines to get out quickly.
I hate waiting.
What are you waiting for? A marriage to finally work its way to peace? A time when you can finally quit your job and work toward your dream? A child who will come back home and change his or her ways? A prayer that you so desperately want answered? A future that you no longer need to worry about? A solution to the problem that you just can't piece together?
Waiting can feel like agony. It can also feel like injustice. Or torture. Or frustration because you don't know why your good God isn't pulling through.
May I tell you something? He is pulling through.
Waiting is not about destroying hope, but renewing you.
“How?” you say.
The 5 Ways Waiting is a Blessing
- Waiting addresses your heart-issues.
What you can't see through times of abundance becomes the red hot potato in your hands during waiting. Here, you can see the burning anger, irritation, bitterness or frustration at God and others. Waiting points a finger to the places God is ready to bring restoration through a heart of confession. - Waiting creates a deeper dependence on God.
When I really need my husband's help to hang a picture or to get something done, I hang near him. I want him to see me and be reminded of what it is I asked him to do. We do the same with God. We hang closer to Him when we really need him. - Waiting reworks our vision.
I can't tell you how many times I've wanted a lesser gift from God. Years ago, I thought it was a silver convertible that was going to be my joy. I prayed for it, desired it and got it. That day was glorious. A couple of months later, it was just another car on the road. I realized I longed for a lesser gift, when what I really wanted was joy. In a wait our vision often adjusts, and rather than asking for a lesser thing, what comes to light is our need for a greater thing. - Waiting sends us out in ministry.
You are not alone in your wait. Thousands of other women and men sit in the same shoes with the same hope, deferred. Waiting helps us to get our eyes off of our demands and to see the dejection of others. As we reach out to them, see the needs and address them, the weight we placed on ourselves lightens. The desire to help and love them increases. Peace swoops in like a dover of hope. - Waiting prepares your heart today for the abundance coming tomorrow.
It's in the waiting that God does his preparing for the gifts, goodness and greatness he will bring tomorrow. As we wait, impurities fall, so we're ready to walk into His best with purity. Waiting prepares us to become holy vessels.
Get Kelly's short daily blog post by email - click here.
Join the 4 Days to Fearless Email Challenge.
Or, book Kelly to speak at your next women's event or conference.