Jesus found me two weeks before my 20th birthday, then a few months later my mom became a follower of Jesus, a few months after her my dad dedicated his life to following after Jesus. It was such an amazing experience to watch the re-birth of my parents. They had the joy of giving birth to me, nurturing me, teaching me, loving me. I had the joy and privilege of sitting with them hour after hour opening God’s word and sharing his love, his unfailing principles, crying, laughing. They were both funny people, people-people. My mom had a plaque in her entry way leading into the kitchen that said,
“I pray for patience, and I want it RIGHT NOW!”
My friends and I laughed at that plaque every time we’d enter the house. I don’t know which parent to thank, or, would that be blame, that instilled in me the RIGHT NOW! mentality but when I decide I want something I set out trying to move the heavens so that the object of my affection will be mine NOW! Is there a pattern with NOW! in my life?
You can imagine especially if you know me well, that the Christ-character we spoke of earlier, that produces the HABBIT OF JOYFUL & CONFIDENT HOPE, sometimes eludes me when I want something and I have loosed my creative juices, flowing like the flooding waters of a wild, swollen river destructively taking everything in its path. Living in the
Then God’s word comes to me and says,
“…the testing of your faith produces patience.” James 1:1, 2
PATIENCE… no, right NOW!
What exactly does PATIENCE mean? According to Strong’s Concordance this word is broken down as such:
*1) not swerved from his deliberate purpose
We all know about ‘swerve,’ after all we drive the freeways; there’s an object sitting square in the middle of the fast lane that fell off some truck that wasn’t secured properly, we swerve around it, and get right back in the lane as we mumble under our breath about the one who caused me to face an obstacle and ‘swerve.’ “Why me,” I ask. “Why NOW?”
According to James we experience testing. We all remember tests in school. They are designed to see if we really learned the lesson. When you face a situation that wants to derail you just know that you are developing the character to:
SWERVE from the immediate danger but get right back in the lane
motoring toward your DELIBERATE PURPOSE.
Where were you going? Deliberate means you have considered (thought about it) and examined (looked at the facts) a reason for and against a given situation. You have made an intentional decision.
Also from Webster, “Purpose always includes the end in view.” You are on a road trip, a journey with the God of the universes. Always remember that He is with you as you travel, bringing things into your path that are designed to make you deliberate in your goal…
James 1:4 But let patience have her perfect work,
that you may be perfect and entire, wanting nothing.