"Are
there any among the idols of the nations that can cause rain? Or can the heavens give showers? Are You not He, O LORD our God? Therefore we will wait for You, since
You have made all these."
Jeremiah 14:22
The prophet Jeremiah interceded in prayer on behalf of the children of Israel in the midst of drought. Unlike those who offered sacrifices and incense to idols in the hope of bringing rain, Jeremiah looked to the God who created the heavens and earth. There was no power in idols or the heavens itself to bring rain, for the heavens were shut up overhead as the water evaporated, grass withered and beasts perished. There was no sense in looking anywhere else for the water God created and could provide, and thus Jeremiah determined to wait for Him.
Waiting is something we do not naturally enjoy--especially if we have been conditioned to believe we are entitled to speedy service, convenience and ease without effort. Since patience is a fruit of the Spirit, the implication is our flesh tends to rush, hurry, worry and fret when our needs are not met. If we discover our regular shop is out of a product we want, we go to another shop. If our efforts are still frustrated, we check our online ordering options; we message friends, make calls or chat with bots. We are persistent with our impatience over things we want: how much more desperate we would be to supply our needs if we lacked water for drinking, cooking or washing, when our lives depended on it?
As I considered waiting for God's provision, guidance and answer to prayer, I was reminded of how we used to call people on a "landline" years ago with a rotary or push-button phone. After the phone number was dialed, the caller could hear a click of a connection being made and subsequent ringing. Some phones would ring and ring while others were connected to an answering machine that would record a message. Because phones were not portable in those days, it would take several rings for someone to hear the phone and answer. An impatient caller would let the phone ring, and as soon as the answering machine began a recorded greeting would hang up, wait for a few seconds, and call back again. Some people preferred to "screen" their calls and waited for the caller to start talking--and if they knew the caller and felt like talking would pick up. If the caller was unwilling to leave a message, however, communication would not happen.
It struck me today when it comes to waiting for God, we can be like that impatient phone caller with God. When we don't receive an immediate answer we do the equivalent of hanging up and vent our complaints to anyone who will listen. Verses like Isaiah 65:24 demonstrate God's omniscience and does not need to "screen" calls or requires caller ID to know intimately the needs of everyone who cries out to Him: "It shall come to
pass that before they call, I will answer; and while they are still speaking, I will hear." God would have us demonstrate our faith in seeking God and waiting for Him, trusting He will provide for our needs. Jesus taught in Matthew 6:30, "Now if God so clothes the grass of the field, which today is,
and tomorrow is thrown into the oven, will He not much more clothe
you, O you of little faith?" Only God who created us is able to meet our needs, and let us be those willing to patiently wait for God's answer.