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Pastimes : Ask and You Shall Receive -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: sa-mule who wrote (3120)11/7/2001 3:52:40 PM
From: calgal  Respond to of 14396
 
Sam:

I got a couple of timely e-mails, which I will post:

Have you ever noticed that rooms speak for themselves? Walk into a freshly decorated nursery and
the room speaks of joy and excitement. On a cold winter evening, enter a cozy den, with a large
fire playing percussion in the fireplace and shadows dancing in syncopated rhythm on the walls and
ceiling. The room invites you to sit down and succumb to its atmosphere. Or walk into a festive
holiday dining room. Plates at each chair await a sumptuous feast. Friendly voices and warm
laughter drift from down the hall. The room sings with the theme of celebration and reunion.

Other rooms aren't nearly as inviting - for example, waiting rooms. For all of us, life brings
many experiences that develop into "waiting rooms." Maybe you're launching into a new arena of
education. Or maybe you've completed your formal education and are waiting for employment. Maybe
you are waiting to have children, or at the other end of the spectrum, maybe you are waiting for
them to leave home. Maybe you're waiting for a long-anticipated trip.

It's impossible for a person not to be waiting for something. And waiting is never easy. I'm sure
it's always been difficult, but I truly believe that our culture has made it even harder. We live
in a society that has ready-made frozen dinners and instant potatoes. Our phones are touch-tone
and mobile, so we can do two things at once. Our ovens are microwaves. Our information is
generated on a computer screen at the touch of a keyboard. Our culture demands instant
gratification and immediate success.

Yet all of us face times when God seems to hit the "pause" button in our lives and He invites -
and sometimes forces - us to accept a posture of waiting. This is true for the biblical character
Joseph. He lived in a "waiting room." Imprisoned on false charges, his deliverance didn't
come quickly.

Joseph met the Pharaoh's chief baker and cupbearer in prison and interpreted their dreams. Joseph
requested that when the cupbearer was released from jail, that he would speak to the Pharaoh on
his behalf. But the cupbearer forgot his imprisoned friend and Joseph's life continued in a
holding pattern for two years.

Then, suddenly, the holding pattern was interrupted. Pharaoh had a couple of dreams: seven sickly,
skinny cows devoured by seven fat cows, then seven scorched and dry ears of grain swallowed by
seven picture-perfect ears of grain. Suddenly the cupbearer remembered Joseph and told the Pharaoh
about the young man in jail who had successfully deciphered his and the baker's dreams.

Joseph was immediately summoned and he rocketed from the pit to the pinnacle in one quick step.
The time of waiting in the stone-cold dungeon had finally expired. He had been in Egypt for 13
years. His arduous ordeal had put him to the test and he had passed with flying colors.

Joseph's principles for coping with the rigors of waiting are still valid today.

1. Wait alertly. During waiting periods, we should be especially
sensitive to God's intentions and actions. God often uses cool-downs
and waiting rooms to prepare us for something we will encounter later in
life. If we are docilely folding our hands and enduring these
faith-stretching times, we are wasting valuable time. We either choose
to draw close to the Lord or we drift from Him.

2. Wait expectantly. When circumstances require patient endurance, the
Bible is the best source of encouragement and hope. From the examples
recorded in His Word, we learn that waiting is part of His plan for
preparing His people. When we are in the midst of waiting, we can
honestly say, "I know that God has a reason for this and He will bring
me through."

3. Wait quietly and patiently. Patience is a commodity in short supply.
The word most often used in Scripture for patience is a word that means
to "abide under." It means that we are unwilling to surrender and
collapse under trying circumstances. Abiding under has an active
quality in that it indicates pressing on and not giving in; it has a
passive quality often referred to as endurance. Once we have done all
we can, we must also trust God to accomplish His purposes.

4. Wait realistically. God is never in a hurry. He works from and
toward eternity. He will take every bit of time needed to make a person
the best he or she can be. Nothing that lasts happens quickly. God is
not the author of shortcuts.

5. Wait cautiously. Our natural instinct is to complain when the delay
lengthens. When we test God in our waiting we have the tendency to look
toward Him as a last resort, rather than a first source. We can also
veer toward deliverance by our own timetable and method rather than His.
We also border on preferring not to have an answer if God's answer
does not agree with ours.

In the midst of waiting, we are never without hope. If you are waiting for something right now,
remember that nothing is impossible with God. If God has you in a time of waiting, be sure to wait
effectively. But if the time of waiting is drawing to a conclusion, be sure you are not numbed
into inactivity. Be willing to step out in the boldness of faith. Remember, life's cool-down
periods and waiting rooms not only have entrance doors, but exit doors as well.

Excerpted from Forged by Fire: How God Shapes Those He Loves, copyright 2000 by Bob Reccord. Used
by permission of Broadman & Holman Publishers, Nashville, Tenn."http://www.lifewaystores.com"
www.lifewaystores.com, 1-800-448-8032.

Bob Reccord serves as president of the North American Mission Board of the Southern Baptist Convention.



To: sa-mule who wrote (3120)11/7/2001 4:06:45 PM
From: calgal  Respond to of 14396
 
Sam:

Believe it or not, God loves you all the most! Now isn't that something? Don't be discouraged. Just hang in there! You all in my prayers! Westi



To: sa-mule who wrote (3120)11/7/2001 4:07:25 PM
From: calgal  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 14396
 
I thought today's Stanley devotional was great:

1 Samuel 17:41-58

A faithful child of God will reckon the victory as sure and certain by applying the strategy David used against Goliath.

Fight the battle before the battle. Get on your face before God and pray through the challenge. Fight it in your heart, spirit, and mind. Let the Lord prune, sift, sand, and weed you as you hash over the situation with Him. Do this until you are certain that you know the will of God.

Reaffirm in your heart that the battle is the Lord’s. Only the Lord can work in your situation for good, and only He can bring about true victory.

Declare the victory. David not only promised to slay Goliath, but also said the Lord would destroy the entire Philistine army. His was the most ambitious of declarations because he served the most certain, true God.

Wait on God’s timing. This sometimes is the most difficult aspect of waging spiritual war or traversing difficult challenges. It wasn’t until David declared what the Lord would do through him that the Lord brought about the victory. Sometimes, He asks us to wait. Always, His timing is perfect.

Proceed in God’s way. We are prone to relying upon the world’s ways when we get into battles. We have to trust God always—even when He asks us to do something that doesn’t make sense immediately.

Trust God. Pray unceasingly. Fight with confidence. Believe God’s promises. Take Him at His Word. Wait for His victory.

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