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RESPONSES AND REACTIONS DRIVEN BY IMPATIENCE NEVER PRODUCE GODLINESS
Psalm
27:13-14
13
I believe that I shall look upon the goodness of the Lord
in the
land of the living!
14 Wait
for the Lord;
be
strong, and let your heart take courage;
wait
for the Lord.
Don’t
tell me what you believe, but let me watch your life, and then I will know what
you believe!
In
this psalm, David has expressed very clearly what he believes about God and His
character. There is no arrogance in his believing, since he knows that it is because
of the grace of God that he believes. What he knows about God is the result of
the Lord revealing Himself to him. What he understands about God’s involvement
in his life is the result of the Lord’s loving teaching. All through the psalm,
we see the careful resolve David has, to not allow the world or its external
pressures to shape his thoughts and reactions.
David has no doubt that
God’s goodness is not only reserved for a future time, but is to be presently
experienced by him, in his relationship and submission to the Lord. His belief shaped his life.
What do we really believe? Well, what does
our life look like?
Here we are today, thousands of years later, worshipping the only true God, the
same God Who led David. We have God’s Word to inform us and instruct us on the
character, wisdom, power, and love of God. We have the local church, where the
teaching and our fellowship with other believers should encourage growth in our
lives.
Should
we ask ourselves if there are reactions and behaviors in our lives that should
cause us concern?
Ephesians
4:31
Let all bitterness and wrath and anger
and clamor and slander be put away from you, along with all malice.
This
verse sums up both the inner feelings and the exterior manifestations of sinful
attitudes.
Can
a person who is resting in the will of the Lord and has abandoned all things of
the past into the hands of God have these kinds of feelings? Or should our faith
in God produce totally different responses?
Let
me be even more clear: are there people in your life whom you are avoiding or,
worse yet, you are not even speaking to? Have you lost contact with a loved one
who has caused you to become bitter against them? Is going to work becoming a
chore that you must grudgingly endure? Is your marriage relationship becoming
an unbearable burden to you? The fact that you are avoiding some thoughts or
people does not mean that those sinful attitudes are not present in your heart!
When
Paul wrote this verse under the inspiration of God, he was delivering a clear
command for all those who are children of God!
The
test comes in the next verse:
Ephesians
4:32
Be kind to one another,
tenderhearted, forgiving one another, as God in Christ forgave you.
If God has forgiven us our sin, then we
have known the grace of God, and that must produce a change in our attitudes
and behavior.
This
verse encourages the very opposites of avoidance or indifference. This verse is
pregnant with inner love and visible actions. It’s hard to avoid its clarity.
Read the preceding verses and allow them to shed light on your life.
No
one can look at these lists and think that they have never been guilty of one
or more of those actions, but there is NO EXCUSE for us to continue in them!
One of the areas where many professing
believers struggle is forgiveness. Not only do they struggle to forgive, but they also struggle
to ask for forgiveness. If you cannot remember the last time you have asked
forgiveness of someone, it is not because you have been living a perfect life,
but because you have minimized your sin, or worse, you have justified it in
your mind. Are you ready for a real test? Go to the person you are closest to
and ask them if they see you as a person who is quick to repent and ready to
forgive. But you can only ask this sincerely if your
prayer is to become more godly in these ways!
Why do we struggle so much when
frustrated in some way?
Because we are impatient! We are impatient with our circumstances; we want them
to be resolved as quickly as possible. We are impatient with people, because
they don’t change as quickly as we would like.
David
had learned to wait upon the Lord. When we feel that circumstances and people
are not changing quickly enough, our impatience is actually directed to God.
Is it easy to wait? Certainly not! Pain and hurt are real and
if we cannot see their value, they become unbearable. David reminds us to be
strong and to let our hearts take courage. What does that look like?
We
come back to the ongoing teaching of Scriptures: know God, believe His Word,
meditate on what is true, surround yourself with godly teaching and godly
people, and trust the Lord.
Quick responses and reactions driven
by impatience never produce godliness.
David
learned many lessons through his seasons of sin and their consequences. He
learned well and, by God’s grace, He was used by God to instruct us. Wherever
you are in your life right now: learn, repent, strive, trust, and wait upon the
Lord.
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