Hi Friends,
Have you ever had to wait during hard seasons? If you have, or if you are currently waiting in a hard season, I hope this short meditation will encourage you. It’s an excerpt from my devotional, From Recovery to Restoration: 60 Meditations for Finding Peace & Hope in Crisis.
We too, wait with eager hope for the day when God will give us our full rights as his adopted children, including the new bodies he has promised us. Romans 8:23b
Waiting for hours to buy gas after a hurricane.
Waiting for weeks for workmen’s compensation to authorize a surgery.
Waiting for months to recover from a heart attack.
Waiting for years to have one happy day after the death of a child.
Whenever our stories are shattered by crisis, a season of waiting will follow. Waiting can be irritating at a long pharmacy drive-thru line, but in the profound losses of a crisis, it can be agonizing. What does it look like to wait with hope as we grieve our losses?
Earthly Hope and Biblical Hope
First we must recognize the difference between earthly hope and biblical hope. Earthly hope focuses on good outcomes in the here and now, or at least the near future. There is nothing wrong with such hope—hoping that the surgery is approved and that the recovery goes smoothly; hoping that the betrayal will sting less tomorrow than it does today. And yet, earthly hope is often limited by our own short-sightedness, our inability to see everything our all-seeing God sees. To all earthly hope, we need to add biblical hope.
Biblical hope is based on faith, on remembering how God has rescued in the past. As Hebrews 11:1 says, “Now faith is the assurance of things hoped for, the conviction of things not seen.”
Or, put another way, “Faith assures us that what we hope for will become a reality, though we can’t see it yet.” Biblical hope focuses on the end of the story, the day when Jesus will return and restore all broken things (Romans 8:18-19). In that day, we will be restored to our Father as his adopted children, and all of creation’s groaning will end in a fruitful labor, in Christ’s perfected new creation (2 Cor. 5:17).
When we wait with biblical hope, we will continue to pray for God’s good gifts on this earth: gas to fuel generators after a hurricane, a sweet memory on a loved one’s death day. But we will also pray, “God, if I don’t get the gas today, help me be patient and trust your provision,” or “If I am sad all day long, be near to me in my grief.” Biblical hope added to earthly hope allows us to believe with conviction that “All things work together for good” (Romans 8:28) in the lives of those who trust God for life and salvation, even when our earthly hopes are disappointed.
Our Deepest Hopes
Dear friends, when the wait feels excruciating, remember that you have evidence that your deepest hopes will not go unfulfilled: Christ has already come to rescue and redeem. Remember what you are waiting for —glory itself! Knowing this, we can hope with an active imagination, leaning into the future, leaning into God’s loving purposes in our hardest waits.
Prayer
Lord,
How long? This is our cry as we wait in impossibly long lines or for seemingly improbable recoveries. Draw our eyes to the horizon, to see Jesus “coming soon” to end our grievous wait. In Jesus’ already-redeeming name. Amen.
Further Encouragement
Read Romans 8:18-30.
Listen to “Spring Is Coming” by Steven Curtis Chapman.
For Reflection
How has waiting felt for you in crises you’ve experienced? What earthly hopes have been disappointed? How might remembering the end of the biblical story help you wait with hope?
I’d love to hear your responses and pray for you if you are in a hard wait. If you subscribe, you can hit “reply,” and interact directly with me. Or, you can leave a comment below, and I will respond.
Thanks for reading! Readers like you make writing a joy for me.
Elizabeth