I've been considering an important question lately:
How does God view me as I wait on Him? I've realized that my attitude about
this--my subconscious assumptions--strongly determines how I feel as I wait.
This is a really tricky area in which I've found myself believing all kinds of
lies.
I can't definitively answer the question, "Why
does God want me to wait for things that I long for?" I can think of some
possible reasons: circumstances needing to line up in a way that's ideal from
God's perspective, or the value of how I'll be transformed through developing
patience. But more importantly, I need to recognize that God's love for me
determines both what He allows in my life, and what His attitude toward me
is.
When God doesn't give me a speedy "yes"
to my prayers, it's an easy, easy thing for me to start thinking that He
doesn't care about my desires, and that my feelings don't matter to Him. I am
amazed at how readily my mind adopts this way of thinking. Yet this is the
age-old trick of the evil one. When Satan spoke to Eve in the Garden, his whole
argument was essentially that God was lying to her and that He wasn't the
loving Father that He claims to be, but rather was trying to keep good things
away from her. And this is the very same lie that I'm believing when I tell
myself that God doesn't really care about me and my waiting.
I read Psalm 27 recently (or Psalm 28 in Western
Bibles), and it says, "The Lord is my helper and my champion;/ In Him my
heart hoped, and I was helped,/ And my flesh revived" (verse 7). This
verse reminds us that God is not just passively watching us, and He is not even simply
cheering us on: He is our champion, actively pursuing our cause,
protecting us, fighting on our behalf, dedicated to our good. I've learned the
value of champions from playing board games; when my opponent's champion comes
onto the board, I get very concerned and target him immediately, because I know
what a powerful force he is. And I find the image of the all-powerful, all-seeing God as my
champion to be incredibly encouraging.
I've realized that I need to actively ask myself
what I believe about God, reminding myself that He "is for us, who can be
against us?" (Romans 8:31). Sometimes I get the idea that God is even
scoffing at me, contemptuous of my hope that wonderful things may come to me,
and this makes me want to abandon my hopes in shame. But, again, who would
plant that idea in my head? It is not from the Lord; it's from the adversary,
who can defeat me most easily simply by convincing me not to fight him at all.
I know this is a theme that I need to ponder more,
and I will most likely come back to it in a later post. In the mean time, I hope these thoughts encourage you in whatever area you may be facing doubt or struggle right now.
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