Waiting on God

Sermon: Sunday, 10th August, 2025
Speaker: John Johnstone
Scripture: Isaiah 40:27-31

1. Feeling forgotten by God

Do you ever feel like God has forgotten about you? Do you ever feel that he doesn’t care? If he did, surely he would have answered your prayers by now and changed things. Can true Christians become disillusioned with God? Can people with genuine faith in Christ feel that God has abandoned them? Can they become angry with God. Yes, they can. Sometimes for a long time. Yes, Christians are those with trust in Jesus, but our trust is far from perfect. Sometimes it’s a wobbly faith. Always, it’s mixed with some measure of doubt and fear and darkness and questions. Perhaps this morning, on the outside it seems your faith is fine, but the truth is, if people could see into your heart they would see that you feel far away from God and you feel that he has let you down.

In Isaiah 40, God acknowledges that his people are feeling this way: ‘Why do you complain, Jacob? Why do you say, Israel, ‘My way is hidden from the Lord; my cause is disregarded by my God’?’   (Isaiah 40:27) They feel disregarded by God. They feel ignored. They feel like they don’t matter to God. They feel neglected. Why? It’s likely because God’s people are going through a difficult season of suffering. It is possible that they are in captivity in Babylon surrounded by enemies and feeling hopeless. God’s covenant promise to be their God and the God of their children seems hollow. Often in times of difficult circumstances, our faith begins to waver. Remember what the disciples to say to Jesus in the boat during the storm: ‘Jesus was in the stern, sleeping on a cushion. The disciples woke him and said to him, ‘Teacher, don’t you care if we drown?’   (Mark 4:38)

Psalm 13 opens with David’s cry: ‘How long, Lord? Will you forget me for ever? How long will you hide your face from me?’ David feels forgotten by God. Doubtless he has been praying, but God does not seem to be answering quickly enough for him. That’s why four times in the first two verses he asks, ‘How long?’ Can you relate to David? You have questions for God that he is not answering. You are in circumstances that you have prayed about again and again and nothing ever seems to change. Perhaps even years and years have gone by. And through our suffering and disappointment, it is easy to arrive at a place where we feel life has ripped the stuffing out of us and God has sat back and watched it all happen from a distance, even though we trusted in him to help, at first anyway. You pray and pray and it seems like only delay and delay from God. ‘My way is hidden from the Lord.’   (Isaiah 40:27) All Christians remain sinners, and we can begin to harden our hearts towards God and think of him in the wrong way. And Christians remain sufferers; the things we have gone through and are going through take their toll on us. We ask: ‘How can God be allowing this to happen to me?’.

Here’s some good news. God understands. He’s not fazed by our cries of disappointment. He’s not going to abandon us. I love the words in Isaiah 42 v3 which outline God’s attitude towards the weak of faith and the vulnerable: ‘A bruised reed he will not break, and a smouldering wick he will not snuff out.’   (Isaiah 42:3) Our God is a compassionate God. However, he does not want his people to remain in a place of such fragile faith. He wants our trust in him to grow once again. He wants us to be able to keep going in spite of our tough circumstances. How does the LORD do this? By reminding us of who he is and by promising strength to those who trust in him. So, if you are feeling like God has forgotten you, let’s take our eyes away from our circumstances, and back to where they ought to be – on God himself.

2. The antidote: ‘Behold your God.’

We all need to be reminded again and again of the basic truths about who God is. We need to relearn them. We forget them so quickly and then we go off the rails. ‘The Lord is the everlasting God.’   (Isaiah 40:28) He is infinite. There never was a time when God was not there and there never will be. He is the one who was, and is, and is to come. He never grows old. He is outside of time. We are all so time-bound and often feel pressurised by time. There’s so much to do and so little time. God never feels that way. We need to remember this when we pray and nothing seems to change. God is not acting on our timescale but on his own. This means we need to be patient.

His name is the LORD, which reminds us that he is the covenant God, who always keeps his promises to us, even if that takes longer than we would like. He is committed to us. He loves us.

He is the Creator of the ends of the earth. There is no part of our world where God is not in control. He is not only the infinite God but he is also the God who is everywhere, even at the ‘ends of the earth’. He is omnipresent. Maybe the Israelites felt abandoned by God in exile in Babylon. But God was right there with them. And maybe you feel abandoned by God here in Fife, in the circumstances of your own home and your own work, but God sees you and he knows what you are going through and he cares.

He will not ‘grow tired or weary’. We grow tired and weary quite easily. If we don’t get enough food or enough sleep we can quickly become jaded. Our strength is so limited. There is only so much we can do. If we are doing housework, which never seems to end, we will need to take a break. We need to rest. In so many jobs in the modern world the workload seems to increase and the number of people helping us seems to decrease. We get stressed and exhausted and burnt out. God never grows tired or weary. Isn’t that amazing? He can make the world in six days and not even break sweat. He never sleeps. He never needs to recharge his batteries. Like the burning bush in Exodus 3, he burns with energy all the time but his resources never diminish. Isaiah is saying to us all this morning: ‘behold your God’. He is eternal and everywhere and all-powerful. And there is more.

‘His understanding no one can fathom.’   (Isaiah 40:28) God is the all-knowing God. He is infinite in his wisdom. I believe this is one of God’s attributes which we need to keep particularly in mind today. When things go wrong for us, we are so quick to put God in the dock and to judge God and find him guilty, as if we are the ones who have infinite understanding.

JL Mackay: ‘…our complaints against his ways of acting are misguided because they are based on incomplete information.’

Often the LORD allows things to happen to us and we simply don’t know why. We cannot see the purpose. But does that mean there is no purpose? Does that mean it is just all meaningless? No! God, and God alone, has all the information. He alone sees the end from the beginning. And he is working all things for our good. When the going gets tough for us, we need to return to the fact that God is wiser than we are. We need to learn to be comfortable in a place where we don’t understand what God is doing, but we understand that he knows what he is doing. We need to let God be God. We need to trust him. We need to trust in his infinite wisdom. I myself have many questions God has never answered. Many things have happened to me that I really don’t understand. What will I do with all of these things? Will I put God in the dock and judge him? Or will I humbly accept that he has infinite wisdom and trust that he knows what he is doing?

During the times of our suffering, Satan wants us to doubt God’s love and wisdom. He attacks our faith and wants to extinguish it. He wants us to think of God as harsh and uncaring. We need to fight these temptations with truth. We need to be reminded about who God is, the one infinite in greatness, strength and power and wisdom.

But we also need to hear the truth about God’s graciousness. What do I mean? We need to know that God is a God who shares his power with those who are weak. ‘He gives strength to the weary and increases the power of the weak.’   (Isaiah 40:29) This is wonderful news. God is the one who sustains us in our weakness. He gives supernatural power to the faint. This might be a word for you here this morning.

3. The antidote continued: ‘Wait on the LORD.’

Verse 30 reminds us that even youths grow tired and weary. Sometimes we look at young people in the prime of life and we think ‘I wish I had half of their energy’. But even they grow tired. Our puppy Jura is 7 months old, just a bairn, and out on walks she seems to have boundless energy. But even she crashes when we get home. ‘Young men stumble and fall.’   (Isaiah 40:30) These young men are those specially chosen for the army because they are so fit. Perhaps for an elite army group. Even they eventually collapse in a heap. If even youths and young men are eventually ground down by life and cannot survive on their own resources, how much more are we going to come to an end of our own resources.

But here’s the thing: it’s good when we come to the place where we realise we cannot cope on our own. It’s good when we stop relying on our own limited strength. Because only then will come to God in prayer and wait upon him for strength from above. We don’t have the spiritual energy to continue following Jesus but the good news is that God has a surplus of energy. So, if you are here and you are disappointed with God, rather than becoming angry with him, why not find a quiet place and ask him for strength instead? ‘… those who hope in the Lord will renew their strength.’   (Isaiah 40:31)

Do you want this supernatural strength from God? Then, we need to understand what it means to ‘wait upon’ the LORD. Because only those who wait upon him shall receive such strength. Perhaps the first step in waiting on the LORD is coming to the end of our own resources. Someone once said, all we need to receive God’s power is to be weak enough. Have you given up on trying to live life on your own strength yet? Then you are actually in a good place to be.

Waiting on God means to adopt a posture of trust, trusting that the LORD will come through for us in his time and in his way. He might not give us what we want but he will give us what we need and what is best. Waiting on God is a patient anticipation that he will help us. We hope on him. We can be content in hard circumstances because we know he will not let us down. It might take time. It might take a very long time from our limited point of view. Waiting on God means crying out to him in prayer for strength each day and then trusting that our heavenly Father will give us our ‘daily bread’. We spread the matter before him in prayer and then leave it in his capable hands.

Waiting on God is not something passive. We don’t just pray and do nothing. Yes, we pray, but we also read our Bibles, reminding ourselves of the character of God. We read his promises to us in the Bible and we trust in them. We wait with patient expectation. ‘The lions may grow weak and hungry, but those who seek the Lord lack no good thing.’   (Psalm 34:10) Do you believe that? We trust that God will act in the right time and in the right way, and in the meantime and this is crucial, we get on with the task of following Jesus in all the areas of our lives. We want his will to be done in our lives as we wait on him.

Then something wonderful happens. We are able to do things we once thought would be impossible. We are able to continue on the path of following Jesus. We are able to keep going in those hard circumstances: ‘They will soar on wings like eagles; they will run and not grow weary, they will walk and not be faint.’   (Isaiah 40:31) Have you ever watched an eagle flying? Have you seen how effortlessly they seem to soar on the air currents with their huge wings. We might think we could never do that. But God can give such strength to us. He can help us to keep on running when we get a stitch and want to stop and he can help us to keep on walking to our destination when it seems like we cannot go on. He is the God who gives strength to those who ask and wait.