Waiting for the King

If 2020 had a Christmas ornament that summed up the year, it would be of a child with their nose pressed up against a window, gazing out expectantly. That is how I’ve felt. First, it was waiting for fertility treatments, then waiting for the pandemic to pass, and finally starting our adoption and waiting on approvals and matching. Waiting is difficult, and patience seems on short supply some days when nothing seems to be happening.

Waiting is very much in line with the season of Christmas advent. Advent is a season of waiting and longing. The first advent was for the appearing of the Messiah. The Old Testament was given through the prophets, God’s Word and messages to his people. He made a covenant with them, first with Abraham, and down through the patriarchs, but again and again, his people strayed. The law given to Moses could only condemn, not save. The sacrificial system only temporarily absolved sins, and the bloody sacrifices were repeated year after year to cover the sins of God’s people. God promised a Messiah, a final sacrifice. But where was he? Prophets, kings, and the very nation failed over and over. Their kingdom split. They were taken into exile. They were brought back to their country, only to have it occupied by the world superpowers. Where was this Messiah? Where was God? He fell silent for four hundred years between the writings of the prophet Malachi and the birth of Christ. Had he forsaken them? Had he forgotten them? 

In a moment of splendor, a bright star shone and angels sang in the sky to signal the fulfillment of the prophesies. Love came down in Jesus Christ. The Son of God became son of Man, infinite divinity merged with finite flesh. He was born in humble Bethlehem, not in a palace, but a humble stable. His mother, a virgin, and his father, a carpenter, had both seen angels, but now they saw the face of God in their babe. Shepherds saw the angels and came to worship. They rejoiced and told everyone what they had seen and heard. Wisemen travelled from the East, bringing gifts far beyond what his poor parents had ever seen. The heavens declared the glory of God and led the wisemen straight to God himself. But the fanfare, a brilliant flash in the dark of night, didn’t last long before Jesus was just a Jewish child, fleeing death as a refugee to Egypt, then returning with his parents to Nazareth in Rome-occupied Palestine. Thirty years passed, as far as the Bible tells us, ordinary and quiet. More waiting.

Jesus’ stepped out of anonymity at the right time, and began his ministry. He turned water into wine, healed the sick, lame, and demon possessed. He taught about the Kingdom of God and called them to repentance. He was sinless, baptized, ridiculed, followed, and revered. He called twelve disciples to follow him and they called him Rabbi (teacher), then the Christ. Religious leaders plotted to kill him, but in the end Jesus laid his own life down as the sacrificial Lamb, the final and perfect sacrifice. This time there were no angels singing in the skies. There was no brilliant star. Darkness came, and the earth shook as its Creator, the Word of God, died, forsaken by the Father God to punish the sins of the world. For three days, creation held its breath. The disciples hid, grieved and confused. More waiting.

In another flash of splendor, Jesus walked out of the tomb three days later, alive! He was raised to life, having conquered death in the grave. After seeing his disciples and some five hundred others, he left instructions to go to every nation and tell the good news of his salvation. He ascended into heaven to sit the right hand of Father God.

He is waiting even now to come again to usher in the new heavens and earth. That’s why we are still waiting, even though two thousand years ago he came, lived, died, and rose again. He’s not finished. Not even close. We live in this tension of the here but not yet. His Kingdom is here on earth in his people, the Church, but we are still waiting for the King to return and fully bring in the new heavens and earth. There is still sin, brokenness, and darkness here. But it won’t be like this forever. 

This is our hope. We are sojourners, exiles, and strangers in this world. This is not our home. This is why the Gospel is good news to the waiting, poor, sick, barren, imperfect, addicted, estranged, heart-broken, and needy. What we see here in this broken, sin-riddled world is not the end. We wait with eagerness, not hoping in what we can get here, or how comfortable we can make ourselves on earth. We are not of this world. The King is coming.

God calls us to be active waiters. We don’t hunker down and wait to die or for Jesus’ return. He tells us to love the Lord our God with all our hearts, souls, and strength, and to love our neighbors as ourselves. We wait, but we fight our sin and for light in the world. We wait, but we hope. We wait, knowing that one day our faith will be made sight, and we will worship around his throne for eternity, all darkness, sin, and death banished forever under the King’s rule and reign. 

What are you waiting on? Are you weary, irritated, and frustrated? Do not lose heart. He hasn’t forgotten you. The King is coming. 

When Hope Hurts

I did it again. I worked on my Pintrest nursery board. I mentally counted the months and estimated the due date. I thought through how and when we’d tell our families. I imagined holding a tiny human with my husband’s eyes, listening to infant squeaks. But with familiar pangs in my empty womb came the lance of reality. No baby. 

Hope is a beautiful thing, but what if hope becomes an enemy? What if, in this season of life, hope is cruel, risky, and unfulfilled? What do we do when hope hurts? 

Hope is a feeling of anticipation and a desire for a certain thing to happen. This anticipation and its appeal is universal. Hope is the central agent of change in storytelling and great epics: Luke to the Rebellion, Frodo to the Fellowship, and Harry to the good wizards and witches.

Hope can affect our bodies as well as our minds. Researchers learned that hope can even alter neurochemistry, mimicking the effects of morphine by releasing endorphins and enkephalins to block pain (Jerome Groopman). 

Hope in Scripture

Hope is a central theme of the Bible. In the Old Testament, the word hope is used eighty-eight times (ESV). Many of these passages express the anticipation of the Messiah and the fulfillment of God’s promises to Abraham and the Israelites. Job, a book centered on suffering, uses “hope” twenty-one times, and it appears twenty-eight times in the Psalms, a book in which the psalmist doesn’t shy away from expressing anguish, fear, and joy to God. 

In the New Testament, we see the disciples’ hope that Jesus is the Messiah. Peter was one of the first to recognize Jesus was the Christ (Matt. 16:16). He promised to never deny him, and even to die with him (Matt. 26:33-35). Peter’s hope was so utterly crushed after denying Jesus three times, he wept bitterly (Matt. 26:75). Yet on the third day after Jesus’ death, Peter himself ran to the tomb and found it empty. Later Jesus appeared and restored him. Hope kindled. Hope lost. Hope restored. Hope fulfilled. 

What do we do when we find ourselves pierced by hope like Peter, left broken and weeping bitterly? 

Shift your Hope

In an oft repeated refrain, the psalmist writes,

“Why are you cast down, O my soul,
    and why are you in turmoil within me?
Hope in God; for I shall again praise him,
    my salvation and my God.”

Ps. 42:11

When hopes are dashed and all seems the darkest, hope in God. Hope, when placed in God, is an unquenchable beacon in the night. God will not fail us. His faithfulness knows no end. He is unchangeable, all powerful, sovereign, good, and just.

If our ultimate hope is in God and his provision in Christ to cover our sin, our darkest day on earth will be the closest we ever get to hell. Even when we  see the whites of the eyes of the enemy and feel him breathing down our neck, we have unshakeable hope. We are in Christ, perfect and complete, made righteous and holy through the blood of the Lamb. Our hope is founded not in this world, but in the eternal Kingdom of God. 

Don’t Lose Heart

Do you hope for rest?Come to me, all who labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you, and learn from me, for I am gentle and lowly in heart, and you will find rest for your souls. For my yoke is easy, and my burden is light” (Matt. 11:28-30).

Do you hope for peace? Do not be anxious about anything, but in everything by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made known to God. And the peace of God, which surpasses all understanding, will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus” (Phil. 4:6-7).

Do you hope for joy?You make known to me the path of life; in your presence there is fullness of joy; at your right hand are pleasures forevermore” (Ps. 16:11).

Do you hope for restoration?And after you have suffered a little while, the God of all grace, who has called you to his eternal glory in Christ, will himself restore, confirm, strengthen, and establish you” (1 Peter 5:10).

Do you hope to be rid of your flesh?And I am sure of this, that he who began a good work in you will bring it to completion at the day of Jesus Christ” (Phil. 1:6). 

Dear one, do not lose heart. God knows and sees the hope that hurts you. Don’t put your hope in temporary things. Rest in your ultimate hope, the Lord, and bask in the assurance that his hope will never be foiled or disappointed. We will one day be with him.

May the God of hope fill you with all joy and peace in believing, so that by the power of the Holy Spirit you may abound in hope.

Romans 15:13
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