This is very serious, everyone... It has become very clear to me that I have a
condition. I’m itchy, achy, restless. I don’t want to go to a doctor—sterilized rooms
terrify me. I don’t want to take some
medication—I’m sort of extremely averse to pills.
I don’t need to go to a psychologist—one, I’m poor and two, I know what’s
wrong with me: I want it to rain.
The clouds taunt me |
Have you ever wanted something so bad it hurt? Craved it so much that your every waking
moment itched with this desire? My very
cells are abuzz with the energy of longing.
When I think of rain, which has been noticeably absent in Nicaragua these past 5 months, my eyes water and my heart races. I’m expectant, waiting, yearning. And it hurts.
I bet this is what it felt like to be the Israelites wandering
that dusty, dry, joy-sucking desert for 40 years. I bet this is what it felt like for Abraham
and Sarah as they waited into their old age for their promised baby. I bet this is what it felt like for the Jews
living in exile in Babylon, longing for their beloved Jerusalem. I bet this is what it felt like for families separated
by the Berlin Wall before 1989. I bet
this is what it feels like for displaced migrants who can’t return to their
home due to the overwhelming presence of violence. I bet this is what it feels like for
Christians who are waiting for Jesus’ Second Coming.
Waiting is itchy, achy, and extremely restless.
Waiting ever so (not)patiently can also make a person go
crazy. As I sit here writing this, I
feel like I’m having an anxiety attack or something. My heart is racing too fast like I just
finished a coffee drinking marathon.
Even worse, waiting can start to make you imagine things are
happening. Take for example my rather
unstable reaction yesterday: I was sitting on my way-too-comfortable couch,
answering some emails, surfing the interwebs when all of the sudden I stopped typing
mid-word. Like a tidal wave hitting
shore, the smell of “wet” hit my senses: somewhere nearby there was a wet piece
of earth calling out to me. I got up
from the couch (probably with a crazed look in my eye) and ran to my front
porch. No sign of raindrops
outside. No sign of a neighbor watering
his garden in a nasty attempt at teasing me.
No puddles, no wet spots, no water main break, nothing. I ran to the garden in the middle of our
house. No sign of rain there
either. And no sign that my roommates
had watered the plants. I ran to our back patio. The same lack of wetness greeted me. Confused, I paused. No, I wasn’t imagining things—I still smelled
wet earth. I looked up into the sky and darkened
gray clouds taunted my gaze. I glared
back at them accusingly. I went back
into the house and, due to the presence of confused and concerned looks from my
roommates, I explained my strange behavior.
Admitting defeat, I fell into a heap on the couch and tried not to think
about what didn’t happen.
Waiting is the worst punishment. Ever.
So why did God make his people wait so much in the
Bible? Why does he make us wait so much
today? What is he trying to teach us?
I’m no magic-8 ball, but I have a sneaky suspicion that God’s
many lessons in patience-training teach us a myriad of things. Waiting teaches me to place my trust in
something other than myself since the current situation is way beyond my
control to change anything. It teaches
me to have faith that the present reality is not static and will change. It teaches me to have hope in the future,
that the coming changes will bring with it relief and restoration. It teaches me to find contentment in the now,
to find joy in the present situation no matter how bleak. It teaches me to be prepared for whatever is
coming, to expect surprises, to anticipate the unknown.
But these lessons will pass me on by if my focus is narrowly
honed in on complaining about how hard waiting is. If I want to not be miserable in this wait
and learn what God is teaching me, then I need to look at my situation, throw
my hands in the air, yell “plot twist!”, and dive back into living life to the
fullest.
So today, I am going to try and embrace this wait I find
myself in. I am going to move forward in
the knowledge that I have found my wilderness, my 40 years in the desert. And I’m going to live it out in the faith and
hope and belief that change is indeed coming. Someday.
Stay tuned!
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