Waiting is one of the hardest spiritual disciplines. We live in an instant-everything culture - instant coffee, instant messages, instant gratification. The idea of waiting for anything goes against our nature and our society.
Yet waiting is woven throughout Scripture. Abraham waited decades for the promised son. Joseph waited years in prison. Israel waited centuries for the Messiah. And we wait - for answered prayers, for breakthrough, for promises fulfilled.
But waiting with God is not wasted time. "Wait for the Lord; be strong and take heart and wait for the Lord" (Psalm 27:14). In the waiting, God is at work - in us and in our circumstances. Character is being forged. Faith is being strengthened. Purposes are being aligned.
Isaiah 40:31 promises that "those who wait on the Lord shall renew their strength." The Hebrew word for "wait" (qavah) means to bind together by twisting, like rope. Waiting on God intertwines our lives with His strength, making us stronger than we could be alone.
The waiting seasons also develop trust. If every prayer was answered immediately, we'd never learn to depend on God's timing or wrestle with His ways. Waiting teaches us that God's delays are not denials and His silence is not absence.
Are you in a waiting season? Don't waste it by fretting or trying to force outcomes. Actively wait - pray, worship, serve, grow. Trust that God is working behind the scenes even when you see nothing changing.
The breakthrough will come. The answer will arrive. And when it does, you'll see that the waiting was worth it.