EXPECTATIONS
"My soul, wait
thou only upon God; for my expectation is from Him." (Psalm 62:5)
We
all have expectations. We expect to be
reasonably healthy in our lifetimes and to grow old before we die. We expect to be financially stable and be
able to care for ourselves and for our loved ones. We expect to be valued and respected as
individuals and to be treated justly by those who are over us. Those are just a few of the big things that
we expect, but it goes much further than that.
We expect that our favorite sports team will always win. We expect that every light will turn green
for us when we are in a rush, and that we won't get behind any slow or elderly
drivers. We expect that our private time
be respected and not interrupted by unplanned phone calls, visits, or requests
for assistance or time. Needless to say, our expectations are all too often
dashed. We are told to "hope for
the best," but by doing this very thing aren't we setting ourselves up for
disappointment knowing by experience that things don't usually go as planned?
James,
a half brother of Jesus, addresses the subject of expectations in his letter to
Jewish believers in Christ. He writes, "Now listen, you who say, "Today
or tomorrow we will go to this or that city, spend a year there, carry on
business and make money." Why, you
do not even know what will happen tomorrow. What is your life? You are a mist
that appears for a little while and then vanishes. Instead, you ought to say, "If it is the
Lord’s will, we will live and do this or that." As it is, you boast and brag. All such
boasting is evil." (James
4:13-16 NIV) James point is that when we
make plans for the future we make a number of assumptions that we have no
control over at all. We don't even know
if we will be living in the next ten minutes or not. All such planning boils down to mere boasting
about how we think we are masters of our own destiny. Instead, James tells us that we should submit
our plans, expectations, and future to the Lord and to His plans for us. As believers in Christ, we have agreed to
follow Him, but we live our lives as if we expect Him to follow us. Instead of laying our desires and demands
before the Lord and expecting that He fulfill them, we should be laying our
lives at His feet and seeking for His
will to be accomplished in our lives. It
is all too easy to forget that our lives are not our own - we have been
purchased with the blood of the Son of God.
Because of this, we must constantly remind ourselves that God does
indeed have a plan for each of us and it may not include exactly what we had
envisioned for ourselves. Several of Jesus
disciples were fishermen. They probably
saw themselves doing that for the rest of their lives and, hopefully, being
able to set back a little money, and set up their sons with boats and a living
when they grew up. After they encountered
Christ on the shores of the Galilean Sea, however, their lives dramatically
changed. They became fishers of men and
pillars of the new church.
"For I know the
plans I have for you, declares the LORD, plans for wholeness and not for evil,
to give you a future and a hope. Then
you will call upon me and come and pray to me, and I will hear you. You will seek me and find me. When you seek
me with all your heart, I will be found by you, declares the LORD." (Jeremiah 29:11-14a ESV) God has plans for each of us. His plans will bring wholeness and
completeness to our lives: even in the face of disaster and
disappointment. When we can approach God
in complete faith that He has our best interest at heart, and lay our
expectations aside in favor of His, then we are in a position where we can pray
effectively to Him and see our prayers answered. As long as we are fixated on what we want God
to do for us, and not what He wants us to do for Him, He can't hear us. We are like spoiled children demanding our
own way when our parent knows better than us what is best. When we finally yield to our heavenly Father
and are willing to say, "Not my
will, but Thine be done," then we have given up our heart to Him and
He will show Himself to us in marvelous ways.
In the spiritual realm, victory always starts with surrender.
In
reality, I realize all too well that we often make wrong turns in life because
of faulty expectations or just plain bad choices. Christianity is a learning process. We have lived our whole lives up to the point
where we accepted Christ as our Savior making our own plans without even
considering what God would want for us. Old
habits are hard to break without God's help.
Each episode of life brings us different lessons, though, and we are
ever learning that Father does indeed know best! Many choices we make come with bad
consequences, however, so it is best for us to submit ourselves early on as
believers in order to avoid many of the heartaches that we may bring on
ourselves.
Even
when we have made some really wrong turns, God is still able to get us back on
track if we acknowledge our mistake and seek Him. How many of us have used a GPS device and had
to deviate from the suggested route because of a detour or just something that
caught our eye that was down a side road.
Immediately, the device will say, "recalculating" and then
begin plotting a way to get back on the prescribed route again. I believe God is like that. No matter how badly we have messed with His
plan, if we are repentant about it and realize our error, He can show us how to
get back on track. I must warn you,
though, that some choices we make carry lifetime consequences. Some can even make it much harder (but not impossible)
to follow the Lord's path. I am reminded
of the importance of the Apostle Paul's words to the Colossian church, "Therefore, as you received Christ
Jesus the Lord, so walk in Him."
(Colossians 2:6 ESV) It is not
enough to say, "I am saved" if we are unwilling to walk with the Lord
as a result of our conversion. Faith
without works (God's working, not ours) is indeed dead.
God
sent His prophet Jeremiah to the house of a potter to watch him making a clay
vessel on the potter's wheel. While he
was forming the vessel, something went wrong and the object he was making
became flawed in some way. Rather than
throw the lump of clay away and start on a new one, the potter simply worked
the clay back down and began over again.
God's words to the prophet were encouraging. He said, "Cannot
I do with you what this potter does with clay?...as the clay is in the potter’s
hand, so are you in my hand," (Jeremiah
18:6 KJV_2011)
God
is shaping our lives into vessels of honor for His glory. It would be absurd to think of a lump of clay
rising up and speaking to the potter who was working it saying, "Hey! What
do you think you're doing? Leave me
alone." We don't hesitate to
question everything God does in our lives however. We really can trust Him. Even when He allows storms into our lives to
teach us that we can trust Him even in the midst of the storms. We love Him when He speaks to the wind and
the waves, "Peace, be still," but without the storms in our lives,
then the times of peace hold no value to us because we have nothing to compare
it to if all we ever know is peace.
We
know we have matured some in the Lord, when we can say with the psalmist, "My soul, wait thou only upon God; for
my expectation is from Him."
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