“God
wants us to adjust our lives to Him so He can do through us what He wants to
do.”
Blackaby
“How
is it that God will use me?” is often a question we each might pose when profound
change or flux or trial is brought into our lives. We have the very evident
desire to be actively serving, but God Himself has not revealed the task. This
universal question is posed by the young, urgently seeking God’s direction for
their lives; by the middle-aged, experiencing times of tremendous change and
responsibility; and by senior saints, realizing that God is not finished with
them yet; and also by churches or Christian organizations, struggling through
times of financial or spiritual trials. Often Isaiah 40, “but they that wait on
the Lord shall renew their strength…” becomes that source of great inspiration,
especially for those in these times of tremendous stress. How much, however, do
we really understand the meaning of the verb wait?
Wait
is an action verb. Action?! It would seem to be a passive thing, yet God
instructs each of us to be a part of the refining process He calls wait. God
encourages us with the injunctions of renewing our strength, running, walking,
not fainting, but waiting seems to be the ultimate challenge because the
responsibility for the outcome is in hands other than ours—in God’s hands. Wait
by its very nature becomes one of the ultimate acts of trust for the person who
“walks by faith and not by sight.”
Our
Church—Grace—has been waiting and waiting and waiting for God to allow our
campus to be restored. It seems as if we have been confronted with roadblocks
that have challenged our senses of right and wrong, pressed at the “it is not
fair” button, and—at times—left us with a lethargy caused by—what we believe—is
too long a wait. God has not forsaken us, but . .
Uniquely,
the timetable involved in waiting is not ours, but God’s. He who does all
things well asks us to look for, to hope in, to eagerly expect His direction in
our lives. It is in the waiting, then, that our patience and confidence in God
is confirmed. Yielding to this process conforms us to Him, more like His image.
The product of our waiting is God’s.
As
we wait for the coming of the Savior, we are to live in dependence upon God,
and we are to walk with Him in fellowship. It is in His presence and leadership
that we find our source of strength. We also learn of God’s blessings along the
way as we wait. Our sister church Morris Hill welcomed and assisted our
Academy. First Adventist has graciously housed our Church family. Our teams of
folk who set up, serve, tear down without complaint have encouraged us. We have
learned much in our wait.
Thus,
the comfort, peace, and joy found in His presence promised to us especially as
we wait has been ours. We do not find spiritual benefits in seclusion. We find
them in following God’s plan and purpose in our daily activities as we depend
upon Him to direct our every path. In one sense, we “must be about [our]
Father’s business.” This direction stems from the minute to the earth
shattering. In it all, we must be “quiet and wait for the direction of His
presence.”
God
is at times silent, and we long for a sense of His presence or for prayer to be
answered as we wish. Thus, His leading is dependent upon our determination by
faith to set Him always before us. He is always intimately concerned for us,
always seeking to bring us more into conformity to the image of His dear Son
all in order that we might be usable vessels. Our responsibility, then, is to
wait in faith upon that which we know to be true.
Scriptures
challenge believers to “walk and not faint, to run with patience the race[—a
marathon race—] set before us,” and “to rest and wait patiently” for Him. This
is not action centered on our own activities which we perceive will honor God
or focused upon our own calculations or perceptions of His Will, but it is an
action centered on the ability to place with confidence our entire trust in
God’s direction. The worthiness of the object of our trust continues to
challenge us to continue moving forward for Him.
The
answer and plan will not always be given to us. Our walk before the Lord is a
step-by-step walk. Based on God’s character, we can say with the psalmist:
“therefore will we not fear.” Confidence and faith in His provision do not, in
this life, always reflect themselves in breezy joy. Confident, hopeful people
are marked by perseverance and a refusal to seek illegitimate relief during
their ongoing struggles because they choose to actively wait upon the Lord.
We,
then, actively and with thanksgiving wait.
--Janet Hicks