PATIENCE
The purposes of God often develop slowly because His grand designs are never hurried.
The great New England preacher Phillips Brooks was noted for his poise and quiet manner. At times, however, even he
suffered moments of frustration and irritability. One day a friend saw him feverishly pacing the floor like a caged lion.
"What's the trouble, Mr. brooks?" he asked.
"The trouble is that I'm in a hurry, but God isn't!" Haven't we felt the same way
many times?
Some of the greatest missionaries of history devotedly spread the seed of God's Word and yet had to wait long periods
before seeing the fruit of their efforts. William Carey, for example, labored 7 years before the first Hindu convert was
brought to Christ in Burma, and Adoniram Judson toiled 7 years before his faithful preaching was rewarded. In western Africa,
it was 14 years before one convert was received into the Christian church. In New Zealand, it took 9 years; and in
Tahiti, it was 16 years before the first harvest of souls began.
Thomas a Kempis described that kind of patience in these words: "He deserves not the name of patient who is only willing
to suffer as much as he thinks proper, and for whom he pleases. The truly patient man asks (nothing) from whom he suffers,
(whether) his superior, his equal, or his inferior...But from whomever, or how much, or how often wrong is done to him, he
accepts it all as from the hand of God, and counts it gain!"
Our Daily Bread.
True patience is waiting without worrying.
C. Swindoll, Growing Strong, p. 124.
"Patience serves as a protection against wrongs as clothes do against cold. For if you put on more clothes as the
cold increases it will have no power to hurt you. So in like manner you must grow in patience when you meet with great wrongs, and they will then be
powerless to vex your mind."
Leonardo da Vinci.
Patience is a virtue,
Possess it if you can.
Found seldom in a woman,
Never in a man.
Source
Unknown.
To those Christians who are always in a hurry, here's some good advice from the 19th-century preacher
A.B. Simpson:
"Beloved, have you ever thought that someday you will not have anything to try you, or anyone to vex you again? There will be
no opportunity in heaven to learn or to show the spirit of patience, forbearance, and longsuffering. If you are to practice
these things, it must be now." Yes, each day affords countless opportunities to learn patience. Let's not waste them.
Commenting on our need for this virtue, M.H. Lount has said, "God's best gifts come slowly. We could not use them if
they did not. Many a man, called of God to...a work in which he is pouring out his life, is convinced that the Lord means to
bring his efforts to a successful conclusion. Nevertheless, even such a confident
worker grows discouraged at times and worries because results do not come as rapidly as he
would desire. But growth and strength in waiting are results often greater than the end so
impatiently longed for. Paul had time to realize this as he lay in prison. Moses must have
asked, 'Why?' many times during the delays in Midian and in the wilderness. Jesus Himself
experienced the discipline of delay in His silent years before His great public ministry
began."
God wants us to see results as we work for Him, but His first concern is our growth. That's why He often withholds
success until we have learned patience. The Lord teaches us this needed lesson through
the blessed discipline of delay.
Our Daily Bread.
Hebrews 12:1 tells us to "run with endurance" the race set before us. George Matheson wrote, "We commonly associate
patience with lying down. We think of it as the angel that guards the couch of the invalid. Yet there is a patience that I
believe to be harder -- the patience that can run. To lie down in the time of grief, to be quiet under the stroke of adverse
fortune, implies a great strength; but I know of something that implies a strength greater still: it is the power to work under
stress; to have a great weight at your heart and still run; to have a deep anguish in your spirit and still perform the daily
tasks. It is a Christ-like thing! The hardest thing is that most of us are called to exercise our patience, not in the sickbed but in the street."
To wait is hard, to do it with "good courage" is harder!
Our Daily Bread, April
8.
According to a traditional Hebrew story, Abraham was sitting outside his tent one
evening when he saw an old man, weary from age and journey, coming toward him. Abraham
rushed out, greeted him, and then invited him into his tent. There he washed the old man's
feet and gave him food and drink.
The old man immediately began eating without saying any prayer or blessing. So Abraham asked him, "Don't you worship
God?"
The old traveler replied, "I worship fire only and reverence no other god."
When he heard this, Abraham became incensed, grabbed the old man by the shoulders, and
threw him out his his tent into the cold night air.
When the old man had departed, God called to his friend Abraham and asked where the stranger was. Abraham replied, "I
forced him out because he did not worship you."
God answered, "I have suffered him these eighty years although he dishonors me. Could you not endure him one night?"
Thomas Lindberg.
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