-
Persistently Patient Series
Contributed by Glenn Pease on Mar 31, 2021 (message contributor)
Summary: Those who do not learn this lesson, and who just cannot accept their limitations, can never become mature adults, let alone mature Christians. Maturity is directly dependent upon one's patience.
- 1
- 2
- 3
- 4
- Next
All our lives we are being tested on our ability to wait. Those
who fail to learn early become candidates for insanity. Nothing is
more frustrating than to have an impatient mind in a world where
you cannot control all that is necessary to fulfill all your desires and
dreams. Gutzon Borglum, who craved the Mount Rushmore
Memorial, was asked if the faces he had craved were perfect in
detail? He replied that the nose of George Washington was an inch
too long, but that it would erode to exactly the right length in about
10 thousand years. If he had been a perfectionist without patience,
he would have worried himself to death over this detail, but he had
the wisdom to accept his limitations, and leave perfection to the
patient working of nature.
Those who do not learn this lesson, and who just cannot accept
their limitations, can never become mature adults, let alone mature
Christians. Maturity is directly dependent upon one's patience.
When a baby cries the mother usually goes immediately to satisfy
it's need. As the child gets older there are longer intervals between
its wishes and the fulfillment. Parents ought to make sure of this by
design. When we say a child is spoiled it really boils down to the fact
that they have not been taught patience. Their wishes have always
been fulfilled with only short intervals between. They have not been
discipline to wait. They expect the world to jump when they say
frog. They are demanding, and they expect to get what they want
right now. They are intolerant of anyone or anything that stands
between them and fulfillment of their wishes. Immaturity is largely
a matter of impatience, just as maturity is largely a matter of
patience. Mature people have the ability to endure the
postponement of wish fulfillment.
A child is usually by nature impatient, and so also immature. If it
wants a piece of candy before supper and you say they have to wait
until after supper, there can be quite a storm stirred up in them.
The child can act as if the world has lost all meaning, and there is
nothing more to live for. They can fall on the floor, kick and cry,
and be uttering crushed by this denial. This is all a part of the
process of becoming mature. The child must deliberately be made to
endure the trials of being denied. This is the only way they can
learn that wishes are not automatically and immediately fulfilled in
life. Parents do their children a great injustice when they send them
into the world unprepared for trial and denial. They must be
taught how to suffer and endure postponement.
God is not so unwise in raising His children. James is saying to
Christians that they are to rejoice in the trials that come into their
lives, for only by these can they learn patience, and only through
patience can they ever be perfect or mature. The Christian who is
raised in a sheltered situation, and who is never allowed to wrestle
with the problems of life, and the problems of faith, and who is
never made to confront the challenge of unbelief, is not prepared to
live in the world as it is. Such Christians are forced to withdraw
from the battle into their own shell, and live in fear lest something
makes them lose their faith. This is not what a Christian is to be.
He is to be a soldier of the cross. He is to be out on the front lines
confronting problems greater than his ability to solve, for only there
will he learn to be patient, and to trust that God can work even
where the Christian's limitations make him unable to work.
To learn patience is identical with becoming Christlike. Jesus
submitted to the limitations of the flesh, and to the slow but sure
way of success through patience. Paul in Rom. 15:5 calls God the
God of patience. If God was not patient history would have ended
long ago. All through the Old Testament we see His patience and
long suffering with Israel. Even before that we see His patience with
Adam and Eve. Instead of striking them dead for their sin, He let
them continue to live, and He promised them redemption. After a
multitude of failures on the part of Israel, God persisted in being
their God, and He patiently worked and waited for the fullness of
time to send forth His Son.
Jesus was not created like Adam. He was not ready to go to work
as soon as the breathe of life was breathed into Him. He had to go
through the process of growth. He patiently worked as a carpenter
until he was 30 years old, even though at age 12 He sensed the call to