Delayed

When I used to travel a lot for work, one of the worse things was walking into the airport and seeing the word “Delayed” next to my flight number. The experienced traveler knows that even a short delay can cause a myriad of problems, and that the likelihood that a short delay will turn into a long one is high. So you learn how to manage these situations. You figure out who to talk to in order to get accurate information. You start calling the airlines while standing in the line to get booked on another flight, willing to take whatever approach will get you talking to a human being the fastest. You consider what other cities you might be able to fly into and still get to your destination on time. When you see the word “delayed” – you take matters into your own hands in order to get what you want.

Sometimes, I do the same with God. I think that He has been delayed in answering my prayers, providing me help, or rescuing me from a storm. I act as if I don’t know that He will provide just what I need at the time that I need it (Luke 12:22-31). I respond as if He doesn’t desire to give me good things (Matt. 7:11), but as if He wants me to “figure it out” the best that I can. I begin to take matters into my own hands – worrying about the future, planning contingencies, and plotting how I am going to make it where I want to be.

But God is never delayed. He always “arrives” on time.  So if my prayer seems to be unanswered, if help eludes me, and if the storm rages on, it must be because the time has not yet come for that trial to pass. But that doesn’t mean I wallow in despair. Because I know that my God will save me. I know that He does desire to provide me good things, and that He is working for my good (Romans 8:28). From my perspective, He may appeared to be delayed but I know He is not.  I can be joyfully confident in knowing that in His time, He will provide relief. And that His timing is perfect, every time.

 

 

For a wonderfully encouraging song by Kristian Stanfill on this same topic, click here [affiliate link].

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The Proper Result

It’s not unusual to want God to be good to us.

We want Him to give us good things, remove trials from our lives, and prepare the path that we need to walk.

We want these things because we want our lives to be easy, and “fulfilling.” We want our lives to be comfortable.

And while it may be natural to want these things,  it is perhaps equally as natural to focus on the wrong outcome of them.

More often than not, we want God to be good for what it does for us. But God’s goodness is not just about us. Perhaps it would be fair to say that God’s goodness is not primarily about us. God’s goodness is about Him.

The Psalmist got this. In Pslam 67:1-2 it is written:

May God be gracious to us and bless us
and make his face to shine upon us, Selah
that your way may be known on earth,
your saving power among all nations.

Did you catch it? The purpose of God’s graciousness and blessing is so that His fame may increase; it is so that as a result, more people will know Him.

That means that the blessings God gives us aren’t about us, they are about Him. One of the ways that God uses our lives to make Himself known is through the good gifts He grants us.

If we had this focus, would it change the things we asked for? If we were concerned with more people knowing God as a result of the blessings He gave us, would it alter our requests?

I tend to think it would. I think we would be less concerned with a comfortable life, and more focused on a God-honoring one. I think, like the Psalmist, our concern would be with God’s face shining upon us – that God would be pleased with the life that we live. And that as a result, God would be made known.

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