The Miracle of Waiting

“Those who wait on the Lord shall renew their strength; they shall mount up with wings like eagles, they shall run and not be weary, they shall walk and not faint.” Isaiah 40:31

Faith is not proven in the moments when everything feels clear, simple, or illuminated. It is proven in the long, quiet stretches where God seems silent, slow, or hidden. These are the seasons when prayers linger unanswered, when direction feels dim, and when life refuses to move at the pace we desire.

Waiting becomes the environment where trust is tested, stretched, and ultimately strengthened. When Isaiah speaks of those who “wait upon the Lord,” he is describing a people who choose not to run ahead of God, who resist the urge to manufacture their own outcomes, and who anchor their hope in God’s timing rather than their own urgency.

Waiting becomes the evidence that we believe God is who He says He is—faithful, wise, and good. If we truly trust His character, then we can trust His pace. Isaiah’s words describe people who have learned to value God’s wisdom above their own impulses. Waiting becomes an act of surrender—an intentional refusal to outrun God even when the path seems obvious or the need feels pressing.

These are people who understand that faith is not measured by how quickly they move, but by how deeply they trust. To wait is to acknowledge that God sees what we cannot, knows what we do not, and governs time with a perfection we could never achieve.

This kind of waiting also requires resisting the urge to manufacture outcomes. Human nature gravitates toward control—toward fixing, forcing, or accelerating what feels slow or uncertain. But Isaiah’s vision of faith calls for a different posture. Those who wait on the Lord refuse to build their own solutions when God seems slow to act.

They resist the temptation to create Ishmaels when God has promised Isaacs. Their restraint is not weakness; it is worship. It is the quiet declaration that God’s way is better, even when His timing feels inconvenient or mysterious.

Faith waits even though waiting is not easy. Waiting confronts every part of us that longs for control, clarity, and immediacy. Our natural instinct is to move, fix, or force outcomes, especially when life feels uncertain or prayers seem unanswered. Waiting exposes our vulnerability. It reminds us that we are not in charge of the timetable, and that realization can feel uncomfortable or even painful.

Yet this difficulty is precisely why waiting becomes such a powerful expression of faith. When we choose to remain in the tension rather than escape it, we are declaring that God’s wisdom is greater than our urgency and that His timing is worth trusting even when it stretches us.

At the same time, the struggle of waiting becomes the soil where faith grows deeper and stronger. Because waiting is hard, it becomes holy. It pushes us to rely on God in ways we never would if everything came quickly or easily. In the slow places, we learn to listen more closely, to surrender more fully, and to hope more fiercely. The very difficulty of waiting becomes the catalyst for transformation—shaping us into people who trust God not only for what He gives but for who He is. In that process, faith becomes more than belief; it becomes endurance, resilience, and quiet confidence rooted in God’s character rather than our circumstances.

Ultimately, Isaiah describes people who anchor their hope in God’s timing rather than their own urgency. Urgency demands immediate answers; faith rests in God’s eternal perspective. Urgency is fueled by fear; faith is fueled by confidence in God’s character.

When believers wait on the Lord, they are not simply passing time—they are placing their weight on the truth that God is never late, never rushed, and never uncertain. Their hope is not in what they can make happen, but in what God has promised to do. And in that waiting, their strength is renewed, their vision is lifted, and their faith becomes unshakeable.

Waiting is the evidence that we believe God is who He says He is because it forces us to place our confidence not in what we see, but in who God has revealed Himself to be. When we wait, we are declaring—sometimes quietly, sometimes painfully—that God is faithful even when circumstances feel unstable; wise even when His timing confuses us; and good even when His delays stretch us. Waiting exposes what we truly believe about God’s character. Anyone can trust God when answers are immediate, but it is in the slow, silent seasons that faith reveals its true substance.

If we truly trust God’s character, then we can trust His pace. God’s timing is never random or careless; it flows from His perfect understanding of what we need, when we need it, and who we are becoming in the process. Our urgency often comes from fear—fear of missing out, fear of losing control, fear of being disappointed.

But God’s pace comes from love. He moves slowly enough to shape us and quickly enough to sustain us. Trusting His pace means believing that His “not yet” is just as intentional as His “yes,” and that His timing is part of His provision, not a barrier to it.

This kind of trust transforms waiting from a frustrating delay into a sacred space. Instead of seeing waiting as wasted time, we begin to see it as the workshop of God—where He strengthens our endurance, deepens our dependence, and refines our desires.

Waiting becomes the place where faith matures, where hope is purified, and where our relationship with God grows more intimate. In the end, trusting God’s pace doesn’t just get us to the right destination; it shapes us into the kind of people who can carry the blessing once it arrives.

The miracle of Isaiah 40:31 is not merely that God eventually steps in and acts; it is that something profound happens within us during the waiting itself. Waiting becomes the environment where God reshapes our inner life—our strength, our resilience, our perspective. As we wait, God is not idle and neither are we.

Our faith is stretched, our dependence deepens, and our character is refined. The waiting season becomes a spiritual workshop where God forms in us what immediate answers never could. The transformation is subtle at first, but over time it becomes unmistakable: we are not the same people who first entered the waiting.

Isaiah describes this inner transformation with three powerful images: walking without fainting, running without growing weary, and rising on wings like eagles. These are not just poetic phrases; they are pictures of what God builds in us through waiting. We become people who can walk without fainting—able to endure the ordinary, everyday demands of life with a steadiness that comes from God.

We become people who can run without growing weary—able to face seasons of intensity or calling without collapsing. And we become people who rise above what once overwhelmed us—lifting into a higher perspective, carried by God’s strength rather than dragged down by circumstances.

This is why waiting is not the absence of God’s work; it is the arena of His deepest work. In waiting, God is not withholding something from us—He is doing something in us. He is preparing us for what He has prepared for us. He is strengthening the muscles of faith, hope, and endurance so that when His answer comes, we are ready to carry it. And often, when the waiting ends, we realize the transformation was the greater gift.

 


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Pastor Godwin, FBC Danvers

Comments

  1. Thank you for this perspective!

    ReplyDelete
  2. Waiting on the log gives the best results.

    Jumping in front of God, will end in tragedy and suffering a lifetime.

    ReplyDelete

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