Worthwhile Waiting
“And being assembled together with them, He commanded them not to depart from Jerusalem, but to wait for the Promise of the Father, “which,” He said, “you have heard from Me”
Acts 1:4 NKJV
http://bible.com/114/act.1.4.nkjv
Living for exigency attracts significant worth of waiting resources, including waiting for career and professional breakthrough, waiting for material and family promotion, waiting for progress in life and ministry, etc. Even the pre-pentecostal experience of the early Apostles underscored the difference between the influence of waiting for administrative changes in human affairs or ministry and the impact of waiting for the promise of the Father. Apparently, the disciples had waited until this time for the fulfillment of the perceived God's promise of administrative and political changes. The best of waiting for administrative efficiency produced Matthias; while waiting for supernatural efficacy produced Paul the Apostle. And later, the early church needed no one to point out the difference. Just as the Lord commanded the Apostles not to depart from Jerusalem, the resurrected Christ admonishes His disciples today not to buy the strategic frustration of the enemy out of His calling into ministerial and meaningful commitments. For example, prolonged waiting through prayer and supplication on the conversion of wayward children or wards, the productivity of fruitless fellowship or partnership, etc, can be discouraging; but the best of exigency approach often produce nothing more than a wasted life. Our home, work, and land urgently needs nothing less than the early church approach for the much-awaited transformation. Waiting for the promise of the power of the Spirit of God represents a worthwhile efficacy with an undeniable productivity.
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