Waiting on God Without Losing Heart
Waiting on God for deliverance is one of the hardest parts of faith because waiting exposes what we truly believe about God, His timing, His goodness, and His control over our lives. When trials stretch longer than we expected, our thoughts can begin to run ahead of God. We start asking, “What if this never changes?” “What if I cannot endure this?” “What if God has forgotten me?” “What if obedience is not working?” That is why Scripture speaks so often about waiting. God knows waiting is difficult. He knows our hearts grow tired. He knows we can become anxious, fearful, discouraged, and tempted to take matters into our own hands.
Psalm 27:14 says, “Wait on the LORD; Be of good courage, And He shall strengthen your heart; Wait, I say, on the LORD!” That verse does not say waiting will feel easy. It says God strengthens the heart of the one who waits on Him. Isaiah 40:31 says, “Those who wait on the LORD shall renew their strength.” Psalm 37:7 says, “Rest in the LORD, and wait patiently for Him.” Psalm 130:5 says, “I wait for the LORD, my soul waits, and in His word I do hope.” That is where patient faith begins: not in pretending the trial is easy, but in anchoring our soul in God’s Word while we wait.
Waiting Is Not Doing Nothing
There is a difference between waiting patiently and doing nothing passively. Biblical waiting is active faith. It is prayer. It is obedience. It is staying in Scripture. It is worship. It is honest lament. It is repentance when needed. It is fellowship with other believers. It is doing the next right thing God has placed in front of us. Passive waiting is like watching paint dry and expecting the rest of the house to paint itself. We may say we are waiting on God, but we stop praying, stop serving, stop obeying, stop seeking counsel, and stop doing what He has already entrusted to our care. That is not biblical waiting. That is spiritual drifting.
Galatians 6:9 says, “let us not grow weary while doing good, for in due season we shall reap if we do not lose heart.” Hebrews 10:36 says, “you have need of endurance, so that after you have done the will of God, you may receive the promise.” That means faithful waiting continues to do God’s will even before deliverance comes. So when you are waiting, do what is in front of you. Pray. Open the Word. Keep your responsibilities. Serve where you can. Make the phone call. Go to work if you are able. Care for your family. Confess what needs to be confessed. Worship when you do not feel like worshiping. Take the next step of obedience. God often renews our strength while we obey, not before we obey.
God’s Delay Is Not God’s Denial
One of the lies a long trial tells us is that if God has not acted yet, then He must not care. But delay is not denial. Habakkuk 2:3 says, “the vision is yet for an appointed time… Though it tarries, wait for it; Because it will surely come.” God’s timing is not always the timing we would choose, but His timing is never careless. James 5:7–8 gives the picture of a farmer waiting for the precious fruit of the earth. The farmer waits because he knows there is a season for rain, a season for growth, and a season for harvest. He cannot force the crop by anxiety. He cannot make the fruit appear by panic. He waits, but he waits with expectation.
That is why James says, “You also be patient. Establish your hearts, for the coming of the Lord is at hand.” Waiting on God means we ask Him for His perfect will, we bring our requests to Him, and leave the outcome in His hands. Philippians 4:6–7 says, “Be anxious for nothing, but in everything by prayer and supplication, with thanksgiving, let your requests be made known to God,” and the peace of God will guard our hearts and minds through Christ Jesus. Prayer is not our way of forcing God to do what we want. Prayer is often God’s way of aligning our will with His perfect will. We can ask honestly, but we must also learn to pray as Jesus prayed: “Not My will, but Yours, be done” (Luke 22:42). That is the phrase I want my own life to be defined by. When my desires are wrong, when my flesh wants relief without surrender, or when I want to force a door God has not opened, I need the will of God to rule over my will.
Trials Train Endurance
Patience grows through trials, not apart from them. Romans 5:3–5 says, “we also glory in tribulations, knowing that tribulation produces perseverance; and perseverance, character; and character, hope.” Then Paul says, “hope does not disappoint, because the love of God has been poured out in our hearts by the Holy Spirit.” That is not a shallow verse. It does not say trials are pleasant. It says God uses tribulation to produce perseverance, character, and hope. James 1:2–4 says something similar: “count it all joy when you fall into various trials, knowing that the testing of your faith produces patience.” Then James adds, “let patience have its perfect work, that you may be perfect and complete, lacking nothing.”
Endurance is like long-distance running. I understand that image because I was a long-distance cross-country runner when I was younger. You do not become a distance runner by wishing yourself across the finish line. You train. You run when it is difficult. You build endurance over time. You learn that the goal is not to sprint for a few seconds, but to keep going until the race is finished. Hebrews 12:1–3 says, “let us run with endurance the race that is set before us, looking unto Jesus, the author and finisher of our faith.” Then it tells us to consider Him who endured such hostility, “lest you become weary and discouraged in your souls.” That is the key. We do not endure by staring only at the trial. We endure by looking unto Jesus.
The Examples Of Scripture Teach Us How To Wait
Romans 15:4 says, “whatever things were written before were written for our learning, that we through the patience and comfort of the Scriptures might have hope.” That means the stories of Scripture are not merely history. They teach us how to wait, how to trust, how to repent, how to endure, and how to keep moving forward when God’s answer has not yet arrived. Joseph is one of the examples I connect with deeply. He was betrayed by his brothers, sold into slavery, falsely accused, forgotten in prison, and then raised by God’s providence at the proper time. Joseph did not see the full picture while he was in the pit, in Potiphar’s house, or in prison. But God was working.
I understand some of that in my own way. As an adopted child, I was sent into a home where I experienced deep pain instead of the safety a child should have known. There were years when I could not see how God was preserving me. I could not see how He would use what I lived through. But later, as I came to know the Lord and understand His love, I could look back and say that God protected and preserved me for His purposes. What was painful was not wasted in His hands. Joseph could eventually say, “You meant evil against me; but God meant it for good” (Gen. 50:20). That does not excuse evil. It declares that evil does not have the final authority over the child of God.
Job teaches us to trust when we do not understand what God is allowing. James 5:10–11 says, “take the prophets… as an example of suffering and patience,” and then reminds us of “the perseverance of Job” and “the end intended by the Lord—that the Lord is very compassionate and merciful.” David teaches us to cry honestly while refusing to abandon faith. He wrote, “I would have lost heart, unless I had believed That I would see the goodness of the LORD In the land of the living. Wait on the LORD; Be of good courage, And He shall strengthen your heart” (Ps. 27:13–14). David did not deny fear, sorrow, guilt, opposition, or fatigue. He brought all of it to God.
Jesus teaches us the deepest surrender. He obeyed the Father all the way to the cross. Hebrews 12 says He endured the cross “for the joy that was set before Him.” If Christ endured suffering with His eyes fixed on the Father’s will and the joy ahead, then we are called to keep looking to Him when our own waiting feels long.
Be Honest With God, But Keep Turning Toward Him
Faithful waiting does not mean pretending we are never afraid, tired, confused, disappointed, or in pain. Lament is part of faithful waiting. Psalm 69:3 says, “I am weary with my crying; My throat is dry; My eyes fail while I wait for my God.” Psalm 119:81–82 says, “My soul faints for Your salvation, But I hope in Your word. My eyes fail from searching Your word, Saying, ‘When will You comfort me?’”
That is honest prayer. “Lord, I am tired.” “Lord, I do not understand.” “Lord, how long?” “Lord, help me not to give up.” The point is not to hide our weakness from God. The point is to bring our weakness to Him. First Peter 5:6–7 says, “Humble yourselves under the mighty hand of God, that He may exalt you in due time, casting all your care upon Him, for He cares for you.” We cast our care on Him because He cares for us. Not because we have figured everything out. Not because the trial makes sense. Not because we are strong. Because He cares.
Guard Your Heart While You Wait
Long trials can tempt us toward bitterness, resentment, spiritual numbness, panic, or sin. Discouragement can make us think, “What is the point?” But one stumble does not mean we turn back altogether. We are not perfect. The men and women of faith in Scripture were not perfect either. They struggled, failed, doubted, waited, wept, and still kept trusting the God who made the promise. That is why we must guard our minds. Isaiah 26:3–4 says, “You will keep him in perfect peace, Whose mind is stayed on You, Because he trusts in You. Trust in the LORD forever, For in YAH, the LORD, is everlasting strength.” Psalm 42:5 asks, “Why are you cast down, O my soul?” and then answers, “Hope in God.”
When our thoughts run wild with “what if,” we must bring them back to what is true. God is in control. God is good. God has not forgotten. God’s promises do not fail. Second Peter 3:9 says, “The Lord is not slack concerning His promise.” Micah 7:7 says, “I will look to the LORD; I will wait for the God of my salvation; My God will hear me.” We must also guard against trying to force a deliverance God has not provided. Impatience can make us reach for sinful solutions, manipulate circumstances, or walk through doors God never opened. Proverbs 3:5–6 gives the safer path: “Trust in the LORD with all your heart, And lean not on your own understanding; In all your ways acknowledge Him, And He shall direct your paths.”
Community Helps Us Wait Faithfully
Waiting can become dangerous when we isolate. We need wise counsel, prayer support, encouragement, accountability, practical help, and fellowship. First Thessalonians 5:14 says, “comfort the fainthearted, uphold the weak, be patient with all.” That is what the body of Christ is supposed to do. Sometimes community strengthens us. Sometimes it comforts us. Sometimes, if we are out of line or walking in pride, it corrects us. All of that is part of God’s care. We should not wait alone if God has placed believers around us. Ask for prayer. Talk to a trusted pastor or mature believer. Stay in fellowship. Let others remind you of God’s truth when your emotions are loud.
Waiting Is Not Wasted When God Is Forming Christ In Us
Waiting feels wasted when we measure God’s faithfulness by the speed of His answer. But God is doing more than resolving circumstances. He is forming Christlike character in us. Colossians 1:11 speaks of being “strengthened with all might, according to His glorious power, for all patience and longsuffering with joy.” Second Thessalonians 3:5 says, “may the Lord direct your hearts into the love of God and into the patience of Christ.” Hebrews 6:12 tells us to “imitate those who through faith and patience inherit the promises.”
That means patience is not dead time. It is training time. It is refining time. It is a time when God strengthens what would not grow in comfort. The inward work may not be visible at first, but it is still real. Second Corinthians 4:16–18 says, “we do not lose heart,” even though “our outward man is perishing,” because “the inward man is being renewed day by day.” We look not at the things seen, but at the things unseen, because “the things which are seen are temporary, but the things which are not seen are eternal.” That is why waiting on God requires an eternal compass.
What Should You Do Today?
For the next 24 hours, do what is in front of you according to the responsibilities God has entrusted to your care. Begin with prayer. Thank God for another day. Open His Word. Read a Psalm. Write down one promise from Scripture. Listen to worship music. Call a trusted believer if you need encouragement. Obey one clear command. Serve someone if you are able. Do not try to solve your whole future today. Do not measure God’s love by how quickly the trial ends. Do not let fear write the story before God has finished the chapter.
Psalm 31:24 says, “Be of good courage, And He shall strengthen your heart, All you who hope in the LORD.” Psalm 62:5 says, “My soul, wait silently for God alone, For my expectation is from Him.” Isaiah 25:9 gives us the final confession of those who waited: “Behold, this is our God; We have waited for Him, and He will save us… We will be glad and rejoice in His salvation.” So remain patient and faithful by doing what Scripture says: wait on the Lord, keep His way, pray without losing heart, obey what is in front of you, stay in fellowship, resist bitterness, trust His timing, and keep looking unto Jesus.
God’s delay is not God’s denial. Waiting is not wasted when God is forming endurance, character, and hope in us. “And not only that, but we also glory in tribulations, knowing that tribulation produces perseverance; and perseverance, character; and character, hope. Now hope does not disappoint, because the love of God has been poured out in our hearts by the Holy Spirit who was given to us” (Rom. 5:3–5).
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Book: I Cannot Give You What I Do Not Have: Finding Unconditional Love in Christ
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Study Guide: I Cannot Give You What I Do Not Have: Companion Study Guide: Healing Generational Wounds Through 40 Devotions