Friday, February 28, 2014

Patient Endurance

“Those who wait on the Lord shall renew their strength” (Isaiah 40:31).

The New Testament tells us that the three great Christian virtues are faith, hope, and love.  But along with other virtues such as joy, gentleness, and humility, we are urged to pursue patience.  And patience is increasingly difficult for us to find.  When we want something, we want it right away.  Any delay in attaining our desires seems to be more than we can bear.

Patience is a critical part of the Christian way of life.  When we seek God’s answer for our prayers, do we ever get bent out of shape because he answers them too quickly?  Not that I’ve ever seen!  We struggle with how long it takes for God to do what we want him to, or what we expect him to.

This is not something unique to our microwave, instant oatmeal era.  For thousands of years, God’s people wrestled with how long it seems for him to get around to doing what we hope for.  I suspect that as the ancient Israelites suffered as slaves for four centuries in Egypt, more than a few of them wondered why God was taking so long to deliver them.  I count at least ten times that the psalmists ask the Lord, “How long?”  How long will you allow the wicked to prosper?  How long will you hide your face from me?  How long must I struggle?  One of the greatest crises in the early church was what scholars call “the delay of the parousia:” a fancy way to say that they thought Jesus would return very soon.  He didn’t, and he still hasn’t.  Nearly every generation of Christians since the resurrection has hoped that Christ would come in their time.  And so far, he hasn’t.

I suspect you’ve experienced the same thing in your life that I have: that which you’ve been hoping and praying for just never seems to happen.  It takes forever, and you don’t know how much longer you can last.  You simply can’t understand why God is taking so long.  Perhaps it even makes you wonder if he cares, or will ever take care of you.  “Waiting on the Lord” sounds inspirational when you read it in the Bible or hear about it in church, but living it can really drain you.

In the leadership program that I’m going through this year, we’ve talked about the need for changes to happen slowly.  When we see something as a church that “needs to be fixed,” we often jump in with a quick fix, without considering what’s really going on.  And we’re likely to latch onto one Big Idea that we think will take care of things, when in reality the process includes many different small steps, some of which will work and some of which won’t.

The Greek word (úπομονη) that we typically translate as “patience” doesn’t simply mean sitting around on the bench the hallway, waiting for something to happen.  It can also be translated into words like “endurance” and “perseverance.”  Waiting on the Lord takes effort, and it means we’re at work while we watch for what he will do.


2 comments:

Unknown said...

I just want you to know how much this spoke to me.

I found a beautiful home a few weeks ago and a man claiming to be you was "renting it for cheep" because he was a "missionary in africa" for 5 days I prayed to get that home knowing that it would be gone because of the price and the style home it was I begged God to save it for me and this man used my faith to steal my money. After a few days of moping around and trying to get him to admit what he did was wrong I found your blog that had not been touched in a few years minus this post.
You lifted me out of my hole and slapped the good faith back into me. God doesn't give you what you want, he gives you what you need and what I needed was to read this..
Isaiah 40:27-31 has helped me through so much in my life, so much that I got the verse tattooed on me to remind myself yet I often forget, And I must thank you again. Keep the faith and continue this blog cause you have an official follower

Peter de Vries said...

I'm glad to hear my post was helpful for you during a difficult time. Sorry to hear that someone claiming to be me had duped you this way.