I am an extremely impatient person, as many of you may be. I remember a particular Christmas as a kid when I actually tiptoed out of my room with a flashlight before dawn just to see what Santa had brought, then went back to bed and pretended to be surprised in the morning when I could finally get up (sorry mom). I hate having to wait on things, especially if it is something I really want.
Over the years, I have really had to learn how to be patient. One of the many areas I have had to learn the lesson of patience, has been in my finances. When I first got married I knew nothing other than simply throwing things on a credit card or loan. In my first few months of marriage in the process of building a home, my husband and I acquired one of the things many married couples do: debt. We wound up with the Home Depot Card, Furniture Row Card, and a few other cards and debts. Of course, we could have saved a little money by buying used, but hey we were married now so we deserved to buy new; regardless of whether we could afford the "things" or not. Thank goodness, about 9 months after we were married, we wound up going through Financial Peace University (a class that teaches about finances from a Biblical perspective by Dave Ramsey) through our small group at church. This course opened our eyes to see how important getting and staying out of debt was, and really revolutionized our thought process when it came to money. We have had to make some tough decisions in order to not go back into the debt we use to live under. It has not always been easy, but has always been worth it.
If you know the story of Abraham in the Bible, you know that there was a little bit of dysfunction in his life. God had promised him a son, but time was ticking away and still he had no son. His wife decided that since she couldn't have a son that they could "rig it" and he could have a son through her servant Hagar (what wife in her right mind would do that???). It worked, Hagar became pregnant and had a son she named Ishmael. However, that was not he son God had promised. Abraham and Sarah had jumped the gun and ended up with less than God's best for them. One of my favorite things about this story is the fact that even though Abraham and Sarah had royally messed up (and we still feel the affects of this mess up all these years later, just look at the middle east), God continued to hold up his end of the promise. The real blessing was Isaac who would be born from Sarah 14 years later. "The Lord kept his word and did for Sarah exactly what he had promised. She became pregnant, and she gave birth to a son for Abraham in his old age. This happened at just the time God had said it would." Genesis 21:1-2 NLT.
So many of us create our own Ishmael in the process of waiting on our Isaac. It is so hard to wait, especially if things look impossible. Things looked impossible for Abraham. After all, he was 86 when Ishmael came along and 100 when Isaac finally arrived. Talk about a long wait! I honestly don't blame them for trying their own way to make things happen. However, had they simply waited and trusted in God, they could have avoided a lot of heartache.
So what is your Ishmael? Have you entered into a bad relationship simply because you didn't want to wait on who God has for you? Or have you gotten yourself into insane amounts of debt because you didn't want to wait and save up? Or maybe you tried to force God's hand on another thing you feel you have been promised and have made a mess of it. Whatever your Ishmael, remember that God is true to his promises. He has an Isaac in store if we can simply wait on His timing.
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