We not only want to know the end of the study, but we also want to know it now. But God wants you to wait. Don't eat the apple when it's still green.
Good morning, welcome to the Morning Motivation, brought to you by Public Square and Patriot Gold Group. So we're talking about why me, when you're going through suffering, why me, why me, why is this happening and how we'll never know here on earth, at least. So Monday we talked about this idea of the tapestry from the backside is just a total mess but from the front, which you can't see while living, it just makes no sense. Oh, you get little glimpses, right, a bad thing will happen, and you'll think, why me, why me, and then years go down the road, you're like, oh, that's a little glimpse of the front of the tapestry, but you can't see the whole thing.
0:00:33
And then yesterday we talked about a hymn from William Cowper, 1773, about how God moves in a mysterious way. We've turned that into the expression God works in mysterious ways. But I like this one more, God moves in a mysterious way. And he has this line here, his purposes will ripen fast, unfolding every hour. The bud may have a bitter taste, but sweet will be the flower.
0:00:59
The bud will have a bitter taste. Means right now, in the moment, it may have a bitter taste, but give it time. This reminds me of a line from John Flable. He's the Puritan minister, a Puritan minister in the mid 1600s. And he was talking about why my prayers aren't being answered right now. What's taking so long? And I just love this because he wrote this sermon 400 years ago. And he's saying, he was asking the exact same questions that we're asking today.
0:01:29
Same thing. What's going on? What's taking so long? Answer my prayer already. He says, now nothing can be more precise, certain, and punctual than is the performance of mercy at the time and season which God has appointed. I love that because we're like waiting for this prayer to get answered on my time and you're late, God. You are not precise or punctual and I'm not even certain you're going to pull through at all.
0:02:01
And so Abel says, no, no, nothing is more precise, or certain, or punctual, than God doing exactly what He will do at exactly the time He knows He'll do it. He goes on, however long it is, or however many obstacles lie in the way of it. Now listen, you either believe that or you don't. You either believe it or you don't. The suffering may last beyond your expectations, but your suffering will not last a moment longer than God's appointment. We look back on the life of David, or Joseph's a classic example, you look back on the life of David and Joseph, it's easy for us because we see the ending.
0:02:49
We see God's plan all along, but in the midst of it. I can't even imagine David crying out Psalm 13. How long O Lord? Will you forget me forever? But that's not a man who sees the front of the tapestry. That's not a man who sees the story arc. That's not a man who knows how it's going to end. How long O Lord? Will you forget me forever? How long will you hide your face from me? But here's the truth from John Flavel. The delay of your mercies, the delay, is really for your advantage. My advantage? My advantage? How is this possibly for my advantage? And Flavel says, the foolish child would pluck the apple while it's green, but when it is ripe it drops on its own accord and is more pleasant and wholesome.
0:03:41
Oh, but God, I want it now and I want it on my time. So when the hymn says, the bud may have a bitter taste, but sweet will be the flower, here's John Flable saying the same thing. Be patient. You want what you want now, but the apple's not ripe yet. You gotta wait. But I don't wanna wait, I want it now. Sure, but how do you know what you want is best? How do you know that getting it now is the right stitch to keep the tapestry metaphor alive?
0:04:17
Why do you think you deserve what you're demanding? The truth is we deserve nothing. So let's jump in and we'll end here with some truths from Sinclair Ferguson. We've got to remind ourselves of these. If you're going through suffering, you have anxiety. Freedom from suffering is not part of the promise of the Christian gospel. People sign up thinking the suffering will go away, and that's not, never a thing. Suffering is, in fact, an integral part of the Christian life. God works through suffering to fulfill his purpose in me, in his time, and it's God's purposes, not mine, are what bring him glory.
0:05:00
And that is the purpose of life, to bring him glory. I don't know about you, but when I get anxious, I run through everything in my head over and over and over and over again. The Bible speaks to exactly this. We'll talk about that tomorrow.