No.
Yes.
Well, kinda.
You see, I’m not talking about expecting something and God being unable to deliver it. That’s just plain silly when talking about our omnipotent God. No, what I’m talking about is whether or not the expectations we come up with are grounded in biblical reality.
What do we mean when we talk about “praying expectantly” or coming to a time of corporate worship, study, or prayer, and “expecting God to do something”? Just what is it we are expecting God to do?
Could it be that He’s already doing something and we’re just not seeing it?
Sometimes, when we read God’s word, we expect God to do something just as “big” as He did in Moses’, Paul’s, or some other Bible hero’s life. We forget that the Bible is sort of like a “highlight reel” of the events in the lives of a handful of people that God drafted to be part of His visible activity at that moment in history.
We focus on the moments Moses had at the burning bush or walking through the Red Sea, and that’s what we want, too. But we forget that Moses’ life wasn’t like that every day. We forget about the eighty years he spent wandering around the desert, half in the day to day monotony of shepherding on the back side of Midian, the other half, wandering around the wilderness with the people of Israel.
Eighty years of nothing special. Day after day of ordinary. Week after week of God not “showing up” and doing something amazing. Eighty years. That’s a lifetime for most of us.
Was God any less at work in Moses’ eighty years of desert wandering than He was when He gave Moses the Law or spoke to him face to face or sent manna? Of course not. During those days, God was protecting Moses from the heat and wild animals, providing food and shelter for him, blessing him with a wife and children, directing his steps, teaching him obedience and trust.
Just like He does for us.
Have you read a Bible passage this week that allowed you to see more of God’s glory? God is doing something. He’s revealing Himself to you.
Are you praying for someone’s salvation? God is doing something. He’s working on the heart of that person.
Did you have a place to sleep last night and food on your table today? God is doing something. He’s providing for your needs.
Do you leave church on Sundays having been fed the truth of God’s word by your pastor? God is doing something. He’s growing you to spiritual maturity.
Is it possible that we’re expecting God to do something in our lives that isn’t in His particular plan for us? You aren’t Moses, and neither am I. Neither were the million or so other Israelites Moses led out of Egypt, and neither have the billions of other people been who have inhabited earth since Creation. Moses was Moses. You are you. God doesn’t have the same plan for your life He had for Moses’ life.
And, by the way, have you ever noticed that most of the people in the Bible through whom God did something “big” were not expecting it or asking for it? Moses wasn’t expecting God to show up in that burning bush. David wasn’t asking God to do great things in his life when Samuel dropped by to anoint him as the next king. Both of them were hanging out with the sheep when God called them. Paul thought he was already an awesome servant of God when he got knocked off his high horse. Mary wasn’t expecting to be expecting. She was just a teenage girl growing up and learning how to run a household.
1 Thessalonians 4:10b-12 says:
But we urge you, brothers to do this more and more, and to aspire to live quietly, and to mind your own affairs, and to work with your hands, as we instructed you, so that you may walk properly before outsiders and be dependent on no one.
That’s what all of those Bible characters were doing when God chose them. Just regular people living regular lives doing regular work. Just like billions of other people through whom God has not chosen to do anything big and spectacular.
But that doesn’t mean God hasn’t been “doing something” in all of our lives. In fact, the vast majority of the work God does in our lives every single day goes unnoticed and unappreciated.
So, instead of setting our expectations on those very rare “wow factor” works of God that seem so appealing, maybe we should be asking Him to open our eyes to, and make us thankful for, all of the things He’s already doing in our lives. Instead of having great expectations of things that God has never promised us, maybe we should ask Him for, and expect Him to, do what He has promised:
Forgiveness for our sin
Christ-likeness
Provision for our needs
Endurance
The ability and opportunity to help others
Faithfulness
Humility
Patience
The opportunity to share the gospel
Because “all the promises of God find their Yes in him.” You can expect it.
And maybe now, you are wondering, what does God expect from me?
|| This post was originally shared at Michelle Lesley Books. You can also follow Michelle on Facebook! ||
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Michelle is a women’s Bible study author, ministry wife, and home schooling mom. She and her husband have six children in their tweens, teens, and twenties. Michelle enjoys reading, spending time with family, and staying active at church and in women’s ministry. Her goal in writing, speaking, and teaching is to train church ladies to be “Mighty Amazon Women” of God: strong in godliness, humility, submission, discernment, kindness, wisdom, apologetics, and hermeneutics.
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Shirley Ann says
This is good ‘food for thought’…. God does so many big and little things for all of us all the time. We truly need to be aware of and grateful for all His works. However I do think it is still okay to wait for ‘a big move’ even if our ‘big’ isnt as big as Moses’.
I love whats between the lines here, no matter the ‘size’ of His works, God IS working.
Michelle says
Thanks, Shirley! Big, small, I’m just glad He’s still working! :0)
Rachael DeBruin says
It’s so true that most of what God is doing is in the land of in between…the time of waiting can really grow us in our faith!
Thanks for sharing at Small Victories Sunday 🙂
Michelle says
Thank you, Rachael!
Karina Ritchey says
Thank you for posting this to the Pintastic Pinterest Party!
Michelle says
Thanks Karina!
Linda says
That was the title of the adult class I was in Sunday. Even if all of us late middle age we were all very interested and wished for more time to share and explore.
Michelle says
Glad you enjoyed it, Linda! :0)