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he
flashing sign on the side of the road offered me little hope. Traffic had already been heavy due to road
construction and now the sign promised that farther ahead, delays could be
expected. Now there is nothing more
uplifting when you are in a hurry to get somewhere than being told that delays
are not only likely, they are guaranteed.
Faced with this prospect, I determined to enjoy my drive and take the
delays, and whatever else came along, in stride.
Not
too far past the flashing panel, those wonderful little orange cones came into
view and slowly but surely the right-hand lane grew narrower. Finally, the lane disappeared completely and
a three-lane Interstate highway was reduced to two lanes. As you can imagine, this caused all types of
“interesting challenges” as drivers waited until the last possible second to
leave the right-hand lane and join those of us trying our best to keep our
patience and maintain forward momentum.
If
you’ve ever been in a similar situation, and I’ll just bet you have, you
understand the frustration that comes with moving along at a snail’s pace down
a major highway. It wasn’t so much that
I was frustrated with the drivers attempting to join the slow but steady flow
of traffic; instead, I was aggravated with the whole idea of being delayed in
the first place. I was on a schedule and
it didn’t include delays on the highway.
I was determined to be at a certain place at a certain time, but the
delay in the traffic’s flow completely wrecked that idea. The delay, however, didn’t prevent me from
enjoying my ride; it just altered my arrival time.
It
should come as no surprise that in the Christian walk there are slow-downs,
detours, delays, and sometime complete halts.
The Scriptures are filled with example after example of times when
things didn’t go exactly according to plan.
Time after time we see God halting the forward momentum of His people
when they would rather have continued going.
But God’s perspective is so different from ours and He knows when delays
and detours are necessary in order to teach us to rely on Him.
One
man who knew all about delays was Joseph.
Betrayed and sold into slavery by his brothers, having committed no
wrong against them, Joseph’s life in Egypt seemed to be one series of
delays after another. He became a slave
in Potipher’s household and just when things seemed to be moving forward at a
good pace, bam, there was a roadblock and a detour which landed him in
prison. While he was there, Joseph was
place in charge of his fellow prisoners and just when he thought he saw a way
out, he was forced to sit through a delay.
This
delay is found in Genesis 40:23-41:1,
“The chief cupbearer, however, did not
remember Joseph; he forgot him…When two full years had passed, Pharaoh had a
dream: He was standing by the Nile…” While in prison Joseph successfully
interpreted the cupbearer’s dream and requested that when he regained his position
that he use his influence with Pharaoh to free Joseph. As the Scriptures tell us, however, the
cupbearer forgot Joseph and he experienced a two-year delay.
But
at the end of those two years, Pharaoh had a dream and the cupbearer remembered
Joseph. What seemed like another
rejection, another bump in the road, was in fact God’s divine
intervention. He had not forgotten
Joseph and the Lord had not caused this delay in order to be cruel or
overbearing. Instead, Joseph had a place
of service in the prison that prepared him for service to Pharaoh and to all of
Egypt . When the two-year delay was over, Joseph was
raised to second in command over all Egypt and was placed in charge of
the entire country. When the delay was
over, was no longer on a two-lane road but on a major highway!
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oday
you may be experiencing a delay in your walk with God. It may seem He has forgotten you, that you
have been sitting still for the longest time and you wonder if you will ever
make any forward progress again. At
times such as these, the temptation is to shut down, withdraw from God and from
others, and become easily frustrated.
What you may not realize is that God is way up the road, smoothing out
rough places, laying new pavement, or putting in more lanes so that your walk
with Him will be better than it has before.
These times are also the times God chooses to test your faith and your
reliance on Him. He knows where you are
at all times and will never abandon you.
That day on the road the sign read “Expect Delays!” It did not say “Turn off your car and get out!”
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