November 9, 2011 — by Julie Ackerman Link
Our Daily Bread
Read: Luke 2:22-38
Blessed are all those who wait for Him. —Isaiah 30:18
Bible in a year:
Jeremiah 46-47; Hebrews 6
Jeremiah 46-47; Hebrews 6
Autumn is hunting season here in Michigan. For a few weeks
every year, licensed hunters are allowed to go out into the woods and
hunt for various species of wildlife. Some hunters build elaborate tree
stands high above the ground where they sit quietly for hours waiting
for a deer to wander within rifle range.
When I think of hunters who are so patient when it comes to waiting
for deer, I think of how impatient we can be when we have to wait for
God. We often equate “wait” with “waste.” If we’re waiting for something
(or someone), we think we are doing nothing, which, in an
accomplishment-crazed culture, seems like a waste of time.
But waiting serves many purposes. In particular, it proves our faith.
Those whose faith is weak are often the first to give up waiting, while
those with the strongest faith are willing to wait indefinitely.
When we read the Christmas story in Luke 2, we learn of two people
who proved their faith by their willingness to wait. Simeon and Anna
waited long, but their time wasn’t wasted; it put them in a place where
they could witness the coming of Messiah (vv.22-38).
Not receiving an immediate answer to prayer is no reason to give up faith.
Not ours to know the reason why
Unanswered is our prayer,
But ours to wait for God’s own time
To lift the cross we bear. —Anon.
Unanswered is our prayer,
But ours to wait for God’s own time
To lift the cross we bear. —Anon.
Waiting for God is never a waste of time.

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