George H. Morrison - Devotional Sermons
Devotional For
January 7
Waiting Upon God
"I wait on thee." Psa 25:21
In the great biblical thought of waiting
upon God there are several interwoven strands of meaning, and it is well to try
to distinguish some of these that we may better grasp the importance of the
term.
Dependence
The first meaning, nestling at the heart of
it and never absent from the mind of any writer, is the concept of dependence. As
the baby waits upon its mother for without its mother it will die; as the
anguished patient waits upon the surgeon for in the skill of the surgeon is the
hope of life, so when one is said to wait on God there is implied an entire
dependence upon Him. There is a sense, in biblical phraseology, in which this
waiting is a universal thing. "The eyes of all things living wait on
thee." The bird that sings, the beast that hunts its prey--all of them are
waiting upon God. But such an inescapable dependence does not bring the thought
to its full blossoming. That demands a dependence which is conscious. It is
when we realize, however dimly, that in Him we live and move and have our
being, it is when we waken to the mysterious certainty that we all hang on God
for every heartbeat--it is only then the word comes to its fullness in the deep
usage of the Scriptures, and man is said to be waiting upon God.
Obedience
Another strand of meaning in the word takes
us into the region of obedience. To wait on is another term for service. The
man who serves us when we sit down at the table and who is there just to supply
our wants, we still distinguish by the name of waiter. When a prime minister
waits upon the king, that is not an idle sauntering business. It is part of the
service to which he has been called, a service which demands his highest
energies. And so when a man is said to wait On God, it is not a negation of
activity, for the thought of service runs right through the term. We wait on
God whenever we help a brother and do it lovingly for Jesus' sake. We wait on
God when we teach our little class or climb the stairs to cheer some lonely
soul. The servant in the kitchen waits on God when for His sake she does her
duty faithfully. The mistress in the living room waits on God when for His sake
she is a lady to her servants. We are all apt to forget that and to narrow down
these fine old Bible words. We are prone to limit the great thought of waiting
to the single region of devotion. But the root idea of it is not devotion. The
root idea is simple, quiet obedience. And what doth the Lord thy God require of
thee but to obey?
Love
Another of the interwoven strands is love:
in true waiting that is invariably present. As love is the source of all the
highest work, so is it the spring of all the finest waiting. Jacob waited for
Rachel seven years, and the years were as a day or two to Jacob because of the
great love he had for her. What makes the mother wait upon her child and rise from
her pillow when she hears it cry? What makes her wait on it with tireless
patience when it frets or tosses with fever? She may be only a frail and sickly
woman, but she never wearies of waiting on her child, and the secret of it is a
mother's love. Love beareth all things and endureth all things. Love can wait
with a patience all her own. Love can achieve miracles of waiting, as many a
young engaged couple knows. And that is why, if we are ever to wait nobly, in
the teeth of all our natural impatience, we must be taught to love the Lord our
God. It must have been very hard in the times of the older covenant for the
common man to wait on God, for God seemed very far away then, and clouds and
darkness were about His throne. But now, under the new covenant and by the
revealing grace of the Redeemer, it is within the reach and compass of us all.
If we hold to it that "God so loved the world," if we say believingly
"Our Father," love to God, once so supremely difficult, is in the
range of the ordinary heart. And, lovingly, we can wait as Jacob waited, and as
the mother waits upon her child, with a service that knows no weariness at all.
Expectancy
There is only one other strand woven in the
word and that is the strand of eager, tense expectancy. To wait on, in a
hundred spheres of life, is eagerly and tensely to expect. You see that in the
dumb creatures--watch the dog waiting on his master. Is the master going to
give him a bit of food? Is he going to throw that stick into the stream? You
see that in any court of law when the accused waits on the verdict of the judge
with an expectancy so tense that it is painful. Now apply that to the realm of
prayer and how it illuminates the matter! To wait on God is not just to pray to
God, for many pray and never expect an answer. To wait on God is to pray with
tense expectancy that the prayer we offer will be answered, for He is the
answer of prayer. All prayer is not waiting upon God in the full and highest
sense of the Old Testament. For a man may rise from his knees and forget the
thing he prayed for and fail to keep on the lookout for an answer. Only when we
pray and pray believingly, and climb the watchtower to see the answer coming,
do we reach the fullness of that fine old term waiting upon God.
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