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Awaiting the Stirring


WordSword

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“Now there is in Jerusalem by the Sheep Gate a pool, which is called in Hebrew, Bethesda, having five porches. In these lay a great multitude of sick people, blind, lame, paralyzed, waiting for the moving of the water. For an angel went down at a certain time into the pool and stirred up the water; then whoever stepped in first, after the stirring of the water, was made well of whatever disease he had (Jhn 5:2-4).

How well have we learned to wait on God in the good and the hardness? We can conclude that there will always be times of lulling, times of not knowing what to think, feel or do which requires simply to hold our conclusions while we “cast or care on Him” (1 Pet 5:7).

I’m convinced that the answers are always in what we learn about the waiting itself. Do we already know that every difficulty will benefit our faith in God, or do we still need to wait and see the answer? If we choose to rest on Romans 8:28 we will never be void of the proper placement of our “care” (1 Pet 5:7). The lessons learned concerning the fact that we need never allow ourselves to be “troubled” (problems are unavoidable) by any hardness (Jhn 14:1, 27) manifests far more of our trust in God than waiting for how He has willed it to conclude.

Thinking on what we presently possess and by Whom we possess it, and on what we will eventually possess (Heaven) allows our waiting to be more at ease and in greater patience. Reminding ourselves of our present surety (2 Cor 1:22, 5:5; Eph 1:13, 14) concerning the Spirit of God and of our faith and salvation, abides all the needed time to allow our hearts and minds to encouragingly allow the “trial” to pass.

To go from “glory to glory” trials must be endured from hardness to hardness, for it is through the trials that faith is strengthened, which is the provision for progressive access to patience, and it is in our patience that our spiritual growth in the Lord Jesus is evaluated (Luke 12:19). Knowing that every single thing that occurs in our life is used by God for our “good” supplies the most support for how we can endure our trials.

I’ve learned that all difficulties are accompanied by pride or impatience, or both. Thus the response is humble in pridefulness and “patient in tribulation” (Rom 12:12), waiting on the Lord in knowing all is and will always be well!

- NC

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I personally do not believe there is we. Instead there is you and me, and many of them too, but even them  they are not collectives, they are individual individual I's and me's. They are not of a group think device, instead they each think individually.

As for me, what I think is that  God moves when God moves and not before. God is of no servitude to me. He will move when He does and that may be long after my own demise. Yet God is fatithful and in that faith I may trust. I do not trust in my faith, but the faith of Jesus my Lord and God Himself.

I will stand on faith through to my death in the flesh without ever seeing the fruition of my prayer  if it is not God's timing for me to see. But my not seeing has no bearing on God's faithfulness to His word nor the time of His answering.

As practical example, my grandparents prayed for my salvation, daily as far as I know. Yet I was not saved, not in their lifetimes. Not until three decades had passed after their deaths in the flesh. God answered their prayer.  And so in part by that very evidence I hold to my prayers too, knowing God answers, and no the answer is not no. It is, God answers prayer proper prayer. He is beyond my own limitations of time in this corruptible body of flesh, He is eternal past and future, eternal. He is faithful. It is His manner to be so.

And so I can be faithful too, holding on though life itself in this flesh comes to it's end, faith  is still full, past time if I am to have memory  of this life in time after this time. 

Edited by Neighbor
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2 hours ago, Neighbor said:

I personally do not believe there is we. Instead there is you and me, and many of them too, but even them  they are not collectives, they are individual individual I's and me's. They are not of a group think device, instead they each think individually.

I agree, and it will be according to what the Father causes us each to do (Phil 2:13).

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