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Tuesday, June 23, 2026

The Purpose in the Pause

“I trust the LORD God to save me, and I will wait for him to answer my prayer.” Micah 7:7 (CEV)

The Bible is clear that I’ll go through different seasons in life. One season God talks about over and over is the season of waiting.

But I can trust that while I'm waiting, God is working. A season of waiting doesn’t mean that God has stopped working. In fact, he’s taking me through that season because he’s using the time to work in my circumstances for my good.

The truth is, I'm going to spend much of my life waiting. And so, if I don’t figure out how to trust God while I'm waiting, I'll spend a lot of my life not trusting God.

God is never in a hurry; he’s eternal! And as he’s working, he wants me to learn how to trust him.

I often ask, “When, Lord? When is it going to happen?” And God’s saying something like, “You can trust me with this.”

It’s human nature to say, “Don’t wait! Get things as quickly as I can.” But that goes against God’s blessing in my life—because God’s blessing often comes through times of waiting. Ecclesiastes 3:11 says, “[God] has set the right time for everything” (GNT).

In a time of waiting, I can be frustrated with how slowly things are happening. We’ve all been there.

There’s a promise in the Bible that not only tells me God is working but also how God is working. I need to claim it while I'm waiting: “I am the LORD, and when it is time, I will make these things happen quickly” (Isaiah 60:22 NCV).

That’s how God worked when he sent Jesus into this world. The world waited thousands of years for him to come the first time. And then he came at just the right moment.

We’ve been waiting 2,000 years now for Jesus to come again. When will that happen? At just the right time—God’s time. That’s when he’s going to return.

You can apply this same truth to my time of waiting. Remember that a delay is not a denial. When I think God is saying, “No,” he may just be saying, “Not yet. Will you keep trusting me through this?”

Micah 7:7 says, “I trust the LORD God to save me, and I will wait for him to answer my prayer” (CEV).

That is the kind of faith God blesses.

In Summary:

Today's study centers on the biblical reality of waiting, utilizing Micah 7:7 to illustrate that waiting is an intentional, God-ordained season rather than a sign of divine inactivity. Human nature naturally resists delays, frequently mistaking a temporary pause for a final denial. However, Scripture emphasizes that God operates on an eternal timeline, working behind the scenes to align circumstances for eventual, rapid breakthrough at the perfect moment. Ultimately, these periods of waiting are designed to shift focus away from a timeline and onto deepening personal trust in God's character and timing.

Bottom Line:

A divine delay is not a denial, but a purposeful season designed to build trust while God actively works out the perfect timing for my circumstances.

Next Step:

Identify one specific area of my life where I am currently experiencing frustration due to a delay, and deliberately shift my daily focus from asking "when" to affirming "who." Practice disciplined action by writing down the specific promise of God's timing from Isaiah 60:22, and review it each morning to align my identity as someone who rests in divine sovereignty rather than forcing independent control.


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