Wait Training
101
By
Karen
Ehman
"... but they who wait for the
LORD shall renew their strength; they shall mount up with wings like eagles;
they shall run and not be weary; they shall walk and not faint." Isaiah
40:31
(ESV)
Ever feel like God signed you up
for
an intense "wait training" class?
You pray. You ask. You anticipate
God's answer, but like an Internet page taking a long time to load, you must
wait.
And wait.
And wait some
more.
I had to wait years before I
became
pregnant. During that time I attended baby showers while choking back
tears.
I had to wait nearly three years
for
our too-expensive-for-our-new-financial-situation home to sell. During that
time, I pinched pennies and lost sleep.
And I'm still waiting on many
prayer
requests: for a spiritually lost loved one, a family friend in ICU, a plan
for
my high school son's future. Waiting, waiting, waiting
...
But just as physical weight
training
builds strength, so does spiritual "wait training." We are promised this in
Isaiah 40:31:
"... but they who wait for the
Lord shall renew their strength; they shall mount up with wings like eagles;
they shall run and not be weary; they shall walk and not
faint."
How can waiting renew our
strength?
After all, doesn't waiting seem to sap our strength as we worry and fret and
drum our fingers impatiently? It's exhausting playing the "What if?" game in
our
minds:
What if this doesn't work
out?
What if God's answer is "No"?
What if the thing I fear the most actually happens ... what then?
All of this worry-laden waiting
drains
rather than strengthens. How can we turn this around and actually find
ourselves
renewed?
I have found that to shift my
perspective in the waiting times replenishes my strength. I try not to think
of
those times of seemingly silence from God as waiting in the sense of sitting
and
anxiously anticipating a response. But as in waiting like a butler, maid or
restaurant server.
Those who "wait on the Lord"—as in
serve Him, cater to Him, help Him accomplish His work; those who take His
order
and bring Him what He wants—they are the ones who renew their
strength.
They mount up with wings as
eagles.
They walk and do not
faint.
As we serve, we become more aware
of
what the One we are waiting on desires. We become alert, attentive, and in
tune
with His wishes. We begin to take our eyes off of our problems and fix them
on
the Lord instead. As we do, we get a glimpse into His
heart.
Then, instead of the wait sapping
our
spiritual strength, it is renewed as we seek to do the Lord's will ... to
make
Him famous ... to give Him glory. Even in those long, hard times of waiting
for
an answer, we continue to serve Him.
Will you sign up with me for Wait
Training 101?
You'll grow stronger spiritual
muscles
if you do. But we must commit to this perspective: we won't just "wait on
the
Lord," we'll wait on Him. Trust me, the tips He leaves are out of
this
world!
Dear Lord, teach me to shift
my
perspective during those times of waiting and doubt. May I stop fretting and
worrying, and busy myself serving You instead. In Jesus' Name,
Amen.
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