When God Doesn’t Expedite

I didn’t expect a simple comment in conversation to stay with me the way it did.

“You can’t pray hard to get express shipping on God’s timing.”

It wasn’t said harshly. It wasn’t meant to correct me. But it settled into my thoughts in a way that felt… exposing. Not because it was wrong, but because it quietly touched something I’ve wrestled with more than I like to admit.

There have been many moments in my walk with God where my prayers carried more urgency than surrender. Not just asking… but hoping something would shift faster because I was asking more intensely. As if persistence could speed up what God had already set in motion.

I don’t think that came from a place of unbelief. I think it came from longing.

There is a kind of ache that comes with unanswered prayer. Not the kind rooted in doubt, but the kind rooted in hope. The kind that knows God can do it… and wonders why He hasn’t yet.

And somewhere in that tension, I’ve had to confront something in my own heart.

Was I trusting God… or was I trying to manage His timing?

Scripture has a way of gently exposing what we don’t always want to see clearly.

“To every thing there is a season, and a time to every purpose under the heaven.” — Ecclesiastes 3:1

A time. Not my time. Not the time that feels most comfortable or most logical. His.

That’s where deep faith begins to look different than I once imagined. It’s not just believing that God will answer. It’s believing that His timing is not a delay… it’s part of the answer. That can be harder because delay feels like silence if we’re not careful.

But Scripture reframes that too.

“The Lord is not slack concerning his promise, as some men count slackness; but is longsuffering to us-ward…” — 2 Peter 3:9

What I sometimes interpret as slowness… God calls patience. What I sometimes experience as stillness… God may be using as preparation.

There have been prayers in my life that, looking back now, I’m grateful were not answered quickly. Not because they were wrong prayers, but because I wasn’t ready for the weight of what I was asking for. Or because God was doing something deeper than the request itself.

And that’s the part we don’t always talk about.

God doesn’t just answer prayers. He forms people. So sometimes the waiting isn’t about withholding. It’s about shaping.

“But let patience have her perfect work, that ye may be perfect and entire, wanting nothing.” — James 1:4

There is a work happening in the waiting that I would have missed if everything arrived when I wanted it to. Yet, this doesn’t mean we stop praying with urgency or desire. Scripture never tells us to become passive or detached. Jesus Himself spoke of persistence in prayer.

“Men ought always to pray, and not to faint.” — Luke 18:1

So it’s not that we stop asking. It’s that we release the timeline. There is a difference between pressing into God… and trying to pressure His hand.

One is rooted in relationship. The other can sometimes be rooted in fear. Fear that if it doesn’t happen soon, it won’t happen at all. But deep faith doesn’t rush God.

Deep faith rests in Him.

Even when the answer hasn’t come. Even when the door is still closed. Even when the silence stretches longer than expected. Deep faith trusts that God is not just hearing the prayer… He is holding the timing.

“Wait on the Lord: be of good courage, and he shall strengthen thine heart: wait, I say, on the Lord.” — Psalm 27:14

There is strengthening that only comes through waiting. Not passive waiting. Not discouraged waiting. But surrendered waiting. The kind that says, “Lord, I trust You not only with the outcome… but with the process.” That kind of trust doesn’t come overnight. It’s learned. Slowly. Sometimes painfully. But faithfully.

I’m still learning it. Still catching myself when I try to rush what God is carefully unfolding. Still being invited back into that quiet place of trust where I remember… He is not late. He is not withholding. He is not unaware.

He is God.

And His timing is not something to fight against… it’s something to rest inside of.

“He hath made every thing beautiful in his time…” — Ecclesiastes 3:11

In His time.

Not rushed. Not forced.

But beautiful.

Lord,

I come to You honestly, with all the places in my heart that still want to rush what You are doing. You see the prayers I’ve prayed, the things I’ve longed for, the answers I’ve hoped would come sooner. And yet, You have remained steady, faithful, and unchanging.

Teach me to trust Your timing, not just Your ability. Help me to release the urge to control what was never mine to control. Where impatience has taken root, replace it with peace. Where fear has whispered that delay means denial, remind me of Your promises.

Strengthen my heart in the waiting. Form something in me that could not be formed any other way. Let my prayers come from a place of relationship, not pressure. From surrender, not striving.

I trust that You are not late. I trust that You are working, even when I cannot see it. And I choose to rest in Your timing, knowing that You make all things beautiful in Your time.

In Jesus’ name, amen.

expectancy of answered prayer

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Held Back by Mercy

Sometimes a picture captures a truth that words alone struggle to carry. When I first saw the image of the dam holding back an overwhelming flood, it immediately reminded me of something Scripture quietly but clearly teaches: the patience of God is real, and it is holding something back.

Not because God is weak. Not because sin does not matter.

But because He is patient.

There is a tendency in our time to avoid speaking about God’s wrath. Yet Scripture never hides it. God is holy, and holiness cannot simply overlook sin. The Bible says, “For the wrath of God is revealed from heaven against all ungodliness and unrighteousness of men, who hold the truth in unrighteousness.” — Romans 1:18 (KJV)

That reality can feel heavy, but it is not written to terrify us without hope. It is written to bring us into truth. God’s justice is real, but so is His mercy. The reason judgment has not yet fallen is not because God has forgotten the world. It is because He is patient with it.

Scripture explains this beautifully: “The Lord is not slack concerning his promise, as some men count slackness; but is longsuffering to us-ward, not willing that any should perish, but that all should come to repentance.” — 2 Peter 3:9 (KJV)

When I think about that verse, the image of the dam makes more sense. Humanity continues building its lives, making plans, raising families, and pursuing dreams, often without a second thought about God. Yet behind the scenes, something unseen is happening. God’s patience is holding back what justice would otherwise bring.

But patience should never be mistaken for approval. Scripture gently but honestly reminds us: “But after thy hardness and impenitent heart treasurest up unto thyself wrath against the day of wrath and revelation of the righteous judgment of God.” — Romans 2:5 (KJV)

Each day a person turns away from God, they are not escaping truth; they are simply postponing their encounter with it.

And yet this is where the heart of the gospel shines the brightest. The story does not end with judgment. God did something extraordinary so that judgment would not have the final word.

He sent His Son.

Jesus did not come merely to teach moral lessons or inspire people to live better lives. He came to carry what we could not. At the cross, the justice of God and the mercy of God met together. Christ took upon Himself the penalty that belonged to us.

Scripture says it plainly: “He that believeth on the Son hath everlasting life: and he that believeth not the Son shall not see life; but the wrath of God abideth on him.” — John 3:36 (KJV)

The dam of God’s patience is not meant to give us confidence to ignore Him. It is meant to give us time to come to Him.

There is still time. That is the quiet miracle of today.

“Seek ye the LORD while he may be found, call ye upon him while he is near.” — Isaiah 55:6 (KJV)

Salvation is not earned through effort or moral improvement. It is received through repentance and faith in Jesus Christ alone. Anyone who turns to Him in humility will find mercy waiting.

And that is the good news worth sharing gently, honestly, and in love.

Lord Jesus,

I come before You honestly and humbly. I confess that I have sinned and have not lived according to Your truth. I ask You to forgive me. I believe that You died on the cross for my sins and rose again so that I could have life. Please cleanse my heart, change my life, and help me follow You. I turn away from my sin and place my trust in You alone for salvation.

Thank You for Your mercy, Your patience, and Your grace. Amen.