Waiting for HIS Time
From 5 Doves
Studying Heb 6:13-15 this morning and realising that we are at the close of the generation I followed the pattern of Daniel who realised that the 70 years of exile were up and asked the LORD this morning “How long O LORD, must we endure as we await the Glorious Hope?”
This is what HE answered me
In addition to the swishing of priestly robes and the sounding of temple trumpets, there was another reason the Hebrews were being drawn back to religiosity. The early church lived in anticipation of the return of Jesus. But weeks, months, and years passed. And Jesus had not come back. “The temple we can see,” the Hebrews must have said. “The incense we can smell. Jesus left us with His promise—but where is He?” Consequently, many grew weary, wondering if they could trust the promise of His coming.
Throughout Scripture, there is inevitably a gap of time between the giving of a promise and the performance of the promise. Abraham “patiently endured.” How long? Twenty-five years. In our case, maybe the same will be true because in the period of waiting, in the gap between the giving of the promise and the performance is when God does His best work.
In this time at the closing of the generation that saw Israel become a nation in 1948, for all those who are watching for the signs and the intensity of these signs today – be patient even if it subjects us to extremes – the end product is beyond our wildest dreams
After anticipating this day for months, Jack and Naomi stand before the pastor promising they’ll be faithful and true in sickness and in health, in riches or rags, until death separates them. But five years later, Jack comes home and says, “I’m out of here, Naomi. You no longer meet my needs. You no longer captivate my heart.” And he walks away from the promises he made, leaving his wife and family behind.
The Bible you hold in your hands is packed full of promises—more than three thousand in number. Many of you have promise boxes sitting on your kitchen table or promise books stuffed in your back pocket. But today, there are those in our midst who would say, “My heart is broken because I don’t think the Lord has kept His promise to me. I claimed the promise. I prayed it in. I wrote it on a three-by-five card and stuck it on my mirror. But nothing happened.”
Maybe, like Naomi, you’re in that place today. If so, this is a highly important text for you to consider. If you’re not, certainly you’re living near or linked to those who wonder why things don’t work as Scripture promises.
In verse Heb_6:12, we are exhorted to follow those who went before us and obtained the promise by faith. The author of Hebrews uses one man specifically as an illustration—Abraham, the father of faith. After Abraham patiently endured, he obtained the promise. What promise? You know the story…
Abraham was seventy-five years old when, in Genesis 12, he was told to leave his home and father to go to a new land where God would give him offspring as the stars overhead. This must have blown Abraham’s mind, for he and his wife, Sarah, had no children at that time. Off he goes on his journey, this father of faith, and sure enough, God gave him a son from whom an entire nation was born. But it didn’t happen immediately. In fact, it took twenty-five years.
And in this there is a hugely important spiritual principle that needs to be part of your life. That is, there is very often a gap of time between the promise and the performance of the promise. In Abraham’s case, the gap of time was twenty-five years. We read that after Abraham patiently endured, he obtained the promise.
I love the New Testament because it is so wonderfully gracious in that it never once mentions the sins or failings of the Old Testament saints. And that’s the way God looks at you and me under the New Covenant. “Your sins and iniquities will I remember no more,” He says, (see Heb_8:12).
If you only read the New Testament account of Abraham, you wouldn’t know the rest of the story. For while it is true that Abraham patiently endured and obtained the promise, it is also true that when he was in his mid-eighties, Sarah said, “I know God promised you we would produce a nation. But let’s be reasonable. Ten years have come and gone since we heard from Him—and nothing’s happened. I’m long past the age of child-bearing, so have relations with my handmaid, and the child produced will count as ours.”
Abraham agreed to Sarah’s suggestion, and a baby named Ishmael was the result. Ishmael was not the promised child—but rather an attempt by Abraham and Sarah to try to help God fulfil His promise. And as is always the case whenever we try to help God out, Ishmael only made matters worse, for Ishmael became the father of the Arab nation. The promised son, Isaac, would come through Sarah thirteen years after Ishmael was born.
“This raises an interesting question,” you say. “What kind of father would give a promise to his kids and then wait twenty-five years to fulfill it? Why does God make us wait?” Following are three reasons why God our Father tells us to patiently endure…
To Produce Endurance
Jeremiah was getting a bit weary of the ministry to which God called him. When are You going to come through, Lord? he wondered. And God answered him by saying,
If thou hast run with the footmen, and they have wearied thee, then how canst thou contend with horses? and if in the land of peace, wherein thou trustedst, they wearied thee, then how wilt thou do in the swelling of Jordan?—Jer_12:5
In other words, “You may think it’s tough now, Jeremiah, but I know what’s ahead. There are some real difficulties coming your way, some tremendous challenges heading in your direction.”
Jesus made it clear that it rains on the just and the unjust alike (Mat_5:45). Because of the fallen condition of the world in which we live, death, disease, poverty, tragedy, and heartache abound. Consequently, God says, “Due to the repercussions of the fall of this planet, due to the repercussions of the depravity of the race, storms are coming.”
“Change the weather,” we say.
“No,” says God. “I am going to change you—through the trials you’re going through right now, through the promises you’re claiming but have not yet seen come to fruition.”
If someone had told me twenty years ago the things that would come down in my life, I would have said, “I can’t deal with that. I won’t be a part of that. No way.” But my Father has been so good, so faithful to prepare me all along the way through difficulties and challenges. Yes, there were promises—but yet there were gaps between the promise and performance that tested my faith—not because God was cruel to me, but because He cared about me. “I’m training you for what I see is coming down the path,” He said. “It’s all part of the plan, Son.”
To Perfect Blessing
“I’m going to do exceeding abundantly above all you could ask or even think,” the Lord says (see Eph_3:20)—”but it’s going to take time.”
Due to our youngest being twins my wife and I had our predestined charges, Ruan was mine and Celine was my wifes for the first year of their lives. At night the cry of one could be identified over the other and my wife and I knew when our turn to rise and minister had come. On an occasion I, was up at night with Ruan, he started crying as I impatiently heated his bottle. I can remember saying, “Calm down, kiddo. It’s coming. You won’t want it cold.”
But you know what? He continued to howl because he couldn’t understand what I was saying. And in retrospect the Lord whispered in my ear today, “Jim, that’s you. I’m cooking something up; I’m getting something ready. But you’re crying, “Where is it?” because you don’t understand the language of faith.”
And that’s all of us. “Wah, wah,” we cry. “It’s been twenty-five days or two years or sixty years. Where’s the promise?” And all along, the Father is saying, “I’m getting it ready. I’m going to do something better than you could even imagine. But it has taken some time.”
Zacharias and Elizabeth were well beyond the years of bearing children. No doubt they had stopped asking for children decades ago. But God heard their prayers and knew He wanted not only to give them a baby, but to give them the greatest prophet who had ever lived, one who would prepare the hearts of Israel for the coming of His Son (Luk_1:16).
The same is true for you and me today. God says, “I want to do things beyond anything you could dream or imagine. So hang on, folks, the bottle’s getting warm.”
I have discovered that the longer God takes to fulfil a promise in my life, oftentimes the better it will be.
“I want a man who loves God passionately,” she says. “Doesn’t God say to delight in Him and He’ll give us the desire of our hearts? Well, I’m praying for a man who loves God, who’s six feet four inches tall with dark hair, a big smile, a good business head, who loves to talk about the Lord, who cares about people, who is a good athlete with a great sense of humour, who’s sensitive and considerate, and who has eyes only for me. That’s what I want.”
So the Lord begins shaping and developing her to make her the woman who would be attractive to such a man.
But what happens?
“I’ve waited two months,” she says as she heads off to Rockin’ Rodeo to scope out the scene. And then she wonders why she ends up with Tex.
After Abraham patiently endured, he obtained the promise. We know the inside story. He wasn’t patiently enduring perfectly. But he learned his lesson, and the promise eventually came his way.
To Prepare Us
The language of eternity is faith. When the Lord has us ruling and reigning at His side, under His command, doing His bidding—whatever that means in the ages to come—He’s going to need men and women like you who are not second-guessing, not doubting, not faltering. Jesus taught about the faithful in this life who will be rulers over five and ten cities in the kingdom (Luke 19). In other words, Jesus is saying there is a destiny far beyond what any of us know or can imagine awaiting us in the next gazillion years to come.
And the language that must be fluently spoken by us if we are going to be ambassadors for Him in the realms and regions beyond is the language of faith.
And that’s what the Father’s doing. “Beloved,” He says, “the only way you’ll be prepared for what’s coming is if I force you to learn the language of faith now because that’s the language you’ll be speaking for the next billion years to come.”
If I were God, you know what I’d do? Once a year, I’d go to every church and appear with a great display of power and fire and smoke. That would probably get everyone by for a year or so. But God knows such a thing would actually undo what He desires to do—for the growth of faith would be retarded. We would depend on what we could see physically or hear audibly—and consequently, we would not be fluent in the language of eternity.
All the promises will come about in due season. In the meantime, precious people, realize God’s heating the bottle. Understand that He’s forcing you to develop a whole new way of thinking and living.
And remember, Scripture says it was after he patiently endured that Abraham obtained the promise.
Come LORD JESUS the time is at hand and YOUR prophecies are always on time
Maranatha
jimmy
September 2, 2009
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Tags: faith, waiting on the Lord · Posted in: Bible Study, Commentary
