Reaping Spiritual Fruits: PATIENCE


Colossians 1:9-13
August 26, 2012

For this reason, since the day we heard it, we have not ceased praying for you and asking that you may be filled with the knowledge of God’s will in all spiritual wisdom and understanding, so that you may lead lives worthy of the Lord, fully pleasing to him, as you bear fruit in every good work and as you grow in the knowledge of God. May you be made strong with all the strength that comes from his glorious power, and may you be prepared to endure everything with patience, while joyfully giving thanks to the Father, who has enabled you to share in the inheritance of the saints in the light. He has rescued us from the power of darkness and transferred us into the kingdom of his beloved Son, in whom we have redemption, the forgiveness of sins.

            Have you ever thought about how many stories in the Bible are about being patient and waiting for God? Of course not. Why would you wonder about something like that? But I wondered because it’s my job to wonder about stuff like that. So yesterday I did a survey of the Bible, looking for stories where people had to wait patiently for God. What I discovered is that virtually every main character of the Bible, at one point or another, had to be patient and wait for God. In effect, if you are a major person in the Bible you had to spend a significant amount of time in faith and hope waiting patiently for God to act.
           
            For example, look at the story of Abraham and Sarah. They had to wait. They prayed to have a child, and it did happen, but only after they thought they were way past childbearing age. The story of Joseph is of a man who was sold into slavery, and then imprisoned. He spent years as a captive in one form or another. You can imagine Joseph, sitting in his slave quarters or dungeon at night, asking God over and over, “When will you release me from my captivity? When will you take me from this injustice?” Joseph had no choice, if he was to remain a man of faith, to be patient and hopeful despite his suffering. And he was rewarded in the end with more than he could have imagined.
           
            The Israelites, as slaves of the Egyptians, had to be patient for generations as they prayed for God to release them from slavery. And when God did release them, they had to be patient for forty years as they wandered the desert, waiting to enter the Promised Land.

            When we think of David, and his being anointed by the prophet Solomon, we make the assumption that he quickly became king afterwards. He didn’t. In fact, because his anointing so threatened the present King, Saul, David had to live as an outlaw in the desert for twelve years. Imagine his frustration. Out of nowhere Solomon appears to tell him that he is the rightful king of Israel. He then defeats Goliath, which cements him as the rightful leader in the Israelites’ eyes, and still he has to live hand-to-mouth as an outcast for twelve years before he can become king. Imagine David’s prayers in the night, asking God to take away this injustice.

            The list of characters who had to be patient in their faith goes on and on. Elijah spends forty days in a cave, waiting for God to speak to him. The Israelites endure seventy years as slaves in Babylon. Jesus spends forty days and nights in the desert. The early Christians had to wait patiently on the Day of Pentecost for the Holy Spirit to come. Paul, even Paul, has to be patient. When we think of Paul’s blinding conversion on the road to Damascus, often we assume that quickly afterwards he was sent on his mission as an apostle to start churches in Turkey and Greece. That’s not what happened. Paul had to go into hiding, where he spent about three years living in the deserts of Arabia. Then he lived another eleven years in Tarsus (present-day eastern Turkey) before he was called to become an apostle. Paul had to wait patiently.

            Plainly put, the Bible constantly teaches that waiting patiently for God is a crucial part of faith. It also teaches that a lack of patience is perhaps the biggest killer of faith. Think about this in your life. How many times have you complained to yourself or another that God is taking SOOOO long? The complaint of many people who’ve walked away from Christian faith is that they prayed and prayed and nothing happened. So they gave up. They may have had the faith to pray, but what they lacked spiritually was the faith to wait for God to do what only God can do.

            How many times have you struggled to trust God because what you are hoping for, what you are praying for, isn’t happening? Are you struggling now? Maybe you’re unemployed and can’t find a job. That has happened to a lot of people, especially in this economy. When you’re unemployed and facing fears about the future, having to wait for God is agony. Maybe you’re lonely and can’t find a mate. That especially happens to a lot of people when they’re younger, but it can really cause people who are older and either divorced or widowed to struggle. Doesn’t God understand our loneliness? Doesn’t God care about what we’re going through? Maybe you’re sick or injured and aren’t getting well. Again, when we are struggling with an illness, especially one like cancer that can lead to death, waiting for any kind of healing can be demoralizing.

            Maybe you want to die and it won’t happen. That sounds like an odd thing to say, but I’ve been around people who struggle because they are ready to die and their bodies won’t comply. Many years ago we had a member here who struggled with this. Her husband had died, her daughter had died, her other daughter lived on the other side of the state. She was suffering from macular degeneration, meaning that she couldn’t really read anymore. Whenever I visited she would complain that there wasn’t much left to live for, and that she didn’t understand why God would let her suffer. Maybe you’re waiting for something significant to happen in your life, and it isn’t happening. Whatever it is, you are stuck waiting, and the spiritual question is, can you be patient.

            I have an odd thought for you—probably one you haven’t thought of. Did you know that whenever you have to be patient and wait for God, you are being biblical and spiritual,… even it doesn’t feel that way? For whatever reason, being patient has always been a crucial part of being faithful. The apostle Paul knew it, which is why he wrote so often about it in his letters. He not only wrote about it in our passage for today, saying “May you be made strong with all the strength that comes from his glorious power, and may you be prepared to endure everything with patience,…”  Paul wrote about patience when listing the fruits of the Spirit. In virtually every one of his letters, he talks about the need for patience.

            I recognize how hard it is for people to be patient when they are really struggling. I remember a conversation I had with a woman many years ago following her divorce. She was lamenting that she had been divorced for a year and hadn’t met anyone she felt she could fall in love with and spend a life with. She had dated several people, but they all seemed to be like her husband, who had been emotionally abusive and neglectful. I said to her that I thought part of the issue was that she needed to undergo a transformation so that she could start to become attracted to healthier men who would treat her well. I said that if she wanted to fall in love with a good man, God had to lead her to change, and that takes time. She could either find a man quickly, who was just like all the other men, or take the time to grow, which meant being patient. It was only when she could become comfortable with being alone that she could find the kind of man who valued her for who she was. The issue wasn’t that she wasn’t meeting anyone. It was that she wasn’t attracted to the kind of men who would treat her well. She ended up struggling like this for three years, but eventually met and married a man who did treat her well. And she said to me, “I would never have fallen in love with him three years ago. But now it’s wonderful.”

            I didn’t come upon my insights accidently. I was able to give her this kind of advice because I also had to struggle with being patient while waiting for God to act. Twice in my life I’ve been unemployed for long stretches. I was unemployed for 16 months between 1982 and 1983. I was lost during that time. I kept praying for God to get me what I wanted, but in the end I realized that God had used those 16 months to transform me into what God wanted.  It was this time of waiting for God that led me to join the church for the first time at age 23. It was also this time that led me eventually to go to seminary. Without the struggle of those 16 months, my life would have been very different, and much more self-indulgent and self-focused. I also was unemployed for 8 months between finishing my Ph.D. and becoming pastor here at Calvin Church. It was during that time that I began to write my first book. I figured that I had just finished writing a 400-page dissertation, so why not try a book. Something good happened out of that time of patience, something that set me on a path to be a writer.

            So why does it seem like we always have to wait so long? Why does God make us wait when God could easily take care of things much more quickly? I have two thoughts.

            The first thought has to do with Kairos vs. Chronos. These are two ways of understanding time. “Chronos” is the time we live in. If you look at the watch on your wrist, it’s official name is “chronometer.” In other words, it measures time. A chronometer measures chronos, and we live in chronos. Chronos is steady, sequential, and passes by in a measureable way. Because we live in chronos, we experience time passing by in a relatively steady way. We can say something took a short time because it passed by in seconds or minutes. Or we can say something took a long time because it passed by in hours, days, weeks, months, years, or decades. So when things take months or years to happen, we struggle because it takes an objectively long time.

            Kairos is different. Kairos is God’s time. I literally means “the Lord’s time.” God does not live in chronos. God created it, but God is not bound by it. That doesn’t mean that God doesn’t work in our time. It’s just that God lives in a time beyond our time—beyond chronos. God’s time isn’t sequential and passing. God lives in a time in which past, present, and future are one, which is basically unimaginable to us because we are trapped in chronos. What feels like a long time for us may not be for God.

            There’s another factor to this. Kairos isn’t just a time beyond our time. It’s also a fullness of time in which more takes place. A way of thinking about it is that when we ask God to relieve our suffering by doing something for us now, we are usually asking God to, in essence, move the universe to meet our needs, and to do it quickly. We don’t take into account all the other prayers that people are sending God’s way, asking that God move the universe to meet their needs. I believe that God answers all our prayers, and actually moves the universe to do so, but God does so in a full way that also fits with God’s eternal plans. So God may find us a job, but God does so by caring for everyone in the workplace we will go to, the workplace we came from, for all those others seeking the same job as us, etc… God, coming from kairos, is looking to respond to our prayers through fullness—through a way that is grace-filled for all who are praying.

            So, this all adds up to us having to be patient for God to act in that fullness. God is doing much more than we realize. We have to be patient. We have to wait for that fullness of God’s time to work.  God is always working beyond our awareness to do more than we could imagine.

            A second thought is that we need to recognize the connection between patience and suffering. In Christianity there is an intimate connection between patience, suffering, and growing spiritually. This is one of those areas that really points out the differences between Christianity and Buddhism. Both deal with the reality of human suffering, but they do so in different ways. Buddhism teaches that suffering is caused by attachments in life that give rise to passions, passions that lead to acts that cause suffering in us and others. So Buddhism teaches us to let go of our attachments and passions in order that we act in ways of compassion. By seeing that life is illusory, and by seeing that what we think really matters doesn’t matter, we let go of our attachment to a worldly life. We let go of our attachment to possessions, ambitions, expectations, and anything that leads to suffering in ourselves or others whenever we bind our lives to them.

            Christianity doesn’t see suffering in the same way. Christianity recognizes that suffering is inevitable in life. People suffer because of poverty, illness, accidents, relationships, the indifference and animosity of others, and more. In effect, Christianity recognizes that nobody gets out of life alive, and that we will suffer at some point. But Christianity also recognizes that suffering can lead to transformation if we trust God. Think about the times you’ve been most transformed. Often it’s been after a time of suffering. That certainly was true for me. My 16-month unemployment completely transformed me. When you are in the hospital you are called a “patient” because you are suffering, and also because the medical staff will do something to transform your body to deal with whatever the problem is. 

            Christianity recognizes the spiritual significance of patience. The word “patience” literally means “to suffer.” It comes from the Latin root, pati, which means to suffer. It is the same root as the word “passion.” We think of passion as a strong emotional drive to do something—we have a passion for football, or a passion for music, or a passion for our jobs. But passion is suffering. That’s why the Mel Gibson movie from several years ago was titled The Passion of the Christ. It was literally “The Suffering of the Christ,” and the movie really centered on that suffering of Jesus prior to and on the cross. When we are patient, we are willing to undergo suffering, because we have faith and hope in God. We work hard to hold onto that faith and hope, even though we are in pain.

            Christianity doesn’t try to avoid or get rid of suffering. It recognizes that suffering is part of life. We can diminish suffering by caring for those who suffer. This is a Christian calling: to relieve the suffering of others when we can. We can also diminish suffering by detaching from things that cause our suffering. Christianity does have some connection with Buddhism there. But Christianity also teaches that suffering is transformative, and if we are willing to be patient in our suffering, we can experience great transformations.

            This message of patience as suffering and as being transforming is present in the story of the crucifixion. Jesus was willing to go through being arrested, beaten, imprisoned, and crucified, and he did it with a sense of suffering patience. He hurt, but he still was willing to endure the pain for what was to come. The result was that it led to a great transformation of him and the world as a result. This is the message of patience:  if we are willing to be patient, if we are willing to suffer for a while, greater things will happen in the end.

            No matter who you are in life, you’re going to face a time when it seems like God is either absent or not working fast enough. If you are able to wait upon God, it’s wonderful what God can do—and your patience will make a difference in your discovering God.
            Amen.