“Knowing
this, that the trying of your faith worketh patience. But let patience have her perfect work, that
ye may be perfect and entire, wanting nothing.” – James 1: 3-4
God’s
perfect work of patience in our lives is not merely an effort to help us avoid
getting angry at a red light or fussing at someone going five under in the left
lane of the interstate. This is a
shallow view of patience. The perfect
work of patience is to bring us to a state of wanting nothing; as a moth to the
flame and bait to a fish, so lust is the devil’s tool to ensnare the
Christian. Herein we find the need for
patience to have her perfect work.
The
plain fact is that trials and temptations happen to us all. Whether rich or poor, young or old, Jew or
Gentile, sanctified or sinner, we will encounter tough times in this life. We as human have at least two natural
instincts in hard times, fight or flight; and both can be detrimental to our
spiritual lives. If you are of the
“fight” mentality then you are of the sort who believes that he or she can
“power through” so to speak. I do not
need anything or anybody I can beat this on my own. The scriptures show us that this attitude
will overrun the will of God and you will find yourself in a place of
want. Contrast that with the “flight”
reaction, running from the issue and often running to something that will offer
immediate gratification. A flight to a
temporary solution for a consistent problem.
Oftentimes these reactions are intertwined in the same person. Choosing flight for one situation and fight
for another, but whether flight or fight or anywhere in between, if you are not
in the will of God and waiting on His plan to unfold then you open yourself up
to sin and death. Say, for example, you
get job, work hard, and everyone around you receives a promotion but you;
however, you deserved it the most.
Therefore, you begin to fight and take matters into your own hands
telling yourself “this is the way it should be.” Then the devil swoops in and says “Yes, yes,
and you need to do this and that to make it that way.” You agree and pursue those things, until
little by little you are drawn away from God’s perfect plan for your life that
would have unfolded given a little patience.
Perhaps you are heart broken and lonely, months go by and you begin to
say, “God, when will this ever end? Can
have a little relief? I deserve
it!” The devil sneaks in and whispers,
“Yes, yes, you do and you can find you entitled relief right over here.” You listen and yield only to find the relief
he offered has made your situation worse.
You drifted away from God’s perfect plan that would have come to light with
but a little patience. “Let patience
have her perfect work.”
The
trying of our faith demands that we have patience, and it demands that we trust
God. Do you believe that God has a plan
for your life? Do you believe His plan
is best for you? When we let patience
have her perfect work and wait on the Lord to perform His plan, this will
shield us from the temptation of “want” and reinforce to us the need for belief
in God. That promotion does not come and
you say, “Lord I don’t understand, but you do.”
The heartbreak does not heal and the loneliness remains and you say
“Lord I don’t understand, but you do.” Patience
is your protection and it will keep you in the will of God and when you are in
his will, you will lack nothing, therefore you want nothing and the devil has
nothing to draw you with. When you
continue to stay in the will of God letting patience have her perfect work
making you perfect and entirely His. It
works.