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Ze Selassie's avatar

This message is both sobering and deeply needed; it reaches into that sacred tension between faith and waiting, where so many hearts quietly falter. Your reflection reminds us that the true test of belief isn’t found in the beginning of our faith, when expectation burns bright, but in the long middle, that stretching season where silence grows heavy and God seems slow.

The image of the Israelites waiting for Moses feels painfully familiar. They had seen miracles with their own eyes, yet still succumbed to impatience when heaven appeared still. And aren’t we the same? We live in an age of constant movement and instant answers, yet faith has always required holy endurance. What destroys belief is rarely disbelief, it’s disappointment left unattended.

This reflection pierces that very point: when the delay grows long, the human heart searches for substitutes; golden calves of our own making. We turn to distraction, self-reliance, and comfort, yet all those things merely dull the ache of waiting rather than heal it. Waiting exposes whether we love God for His presence or merely for His promises.

The insight about Abraham is especially fitting. Even the father of faith grew weary and tried to “help” God; proof that waiting tests not only our patience but our trust in His timing. And yet, God was faithful to fulfill His word, not because Abraham was perfect, but because God’s covenant love endures even when ours wavers.

This devotion invites us back to steadfastness, to remember that delay does not mean denial. Christ’s promise to return is not forgotten; it is being fulfilled on heaven’s clock, not ours. The call is not to give up watching, but to watch well, to live faithfully, love deeply, and serve humbly while we wait.

“Blessed is that servant whom the Master finds doing so when He returns.” (Luke 12:43)

May we be found waiting; not idly, but faithfully. Not with scoffing hearts, but with lamps still burning, eyes still lifted, and hope still alive.

Blessings!!

Linzy Bruno's avatar

Exactly! What seems like a long time to us is momentary to God. Furthermore, the Bible gives us many signs to look for so we will know the season. How long is a season though? I learned about the Rapture in 2017; watching now for 8 years. To us that's a long time, but not to GOD. It all comes down to trust. For 8 years I've been waiting; noting the season and it has been in place even longer than that. The prophetic clock started ticking back in 1948, so that seems to point to how long a season is. And most poignant about the season is how the signs have exploded over the past 10 years or so. So we can see the Day approaching.....What you wrote is so important, we need to keep talking about these end times details as they become more and more crystal clear to us to help and support one another!

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