Faith and the Weight of the Wait
by: Matthew M. Nepomuceno
Hebrews 11:1 says, “Faith is confidence in what we hope
for and assurance about what we do not see."
There are four points that I would like to highlight here:
(1) confidence, (2) hope, (3) assurance, and (4) we do not see. Faith is about confidence. We can’t say it’s FAITH if
it’s mixed up with DOUBT. Faith means you’re confident that what you’re waiting
for, what you’re hoping for, will come no matter how bad or how impossible the
situation is. Faith is also about hope.
These two come in pairs. We can’t say we have faith if we do not hope. We
cannot maintain being hopeful if we do not have faith. Those who feel hopeless
are those who also start to lose faith.
Finally, Faith also comes with an assurance despite not being
able to see. Receiving the item you ordered from an online shop is not
about “faith” because you can see it, you can even track its progress using an
app’s logistics tracker. Faith is believing that something will happen even if
you don’t even know what, where, when, or how.
But faith also comes with a heavy weight: WAITING.
Perhaps one of the most difficult things to do is to wait
especially when you’re not sure when or how it will arrive, or, if it will
arrive at all. When you order from an online shop, you wait. But you can
actually demand as a customer, especially if the seller specified a time when
the parcel will arrive. But what if you’re waiting for something that is beyond
your control? Something, beyond your means? Like being cured from a disease,
getting your dream job, or like what most couples pray for, having a baby.
Kay and I got married in 2014 and from then on, we hoped and
waited for a baby. I thought it’s gonna be fast just like what you usually see
in movies, but it wasn’t as easy as it seems. My wife has Polycstic Ovarian
Syndrome (PCOS), which means she has too many follicles that do not develop into
an egg. This is why it’s difficult from some PCOS patients to conceive. You
wouldn’t know when the egg will be fertilized because unlike women with regular
menstruation, PCOS patients do not menstruate regularly. In the case of my
wife, she would have droplets of menstruation perhaps once or twice a year. Unless
she takes pills that would “force” her ovaries to produce a viable egg.
For the past four years since our wedding, we have tried
many cycles to take meds in high hopes that her ovaries will be triggered or
stimulated to produce an egg, to no avail.
The weight of the wait becomes heavier as months and years
pass by, especially when you have people around you (relatives, colleagues, etc.)
who would ask “When are you going to have a baby?” During the first few years,
I didn’t really mind because I know and I am assured that God will give us
children. However, it starts to become painful and offending when you see your
wife crying randomly asking—
“Do you still love me?”
“Will you stay even if
we won’t have children?”
“Can you still wait?”
Waiting is never a fun thing to do. It makes you anxious, doubtful,
and worried. These thoughts become the devil’s entry point for more negative
ideas and as they become planted deeper and deeper, one starts to lose hope, to
stagnate, to falter.
What dreams and aspirations do you have? How long have you
been waiting? Praying for it to come or to happen?
Do not let delays or “rejections” keep you away from your
faith, from your dreams. Romans 8:28 says, “And we know that in all things God
works for the good of those who love him, who have been called according to his
purpose.” Whether your prayer gets answered with a YES, LATER, or NO, have
faith because those who do will discover an even greater blessing ahead of
their lives.
*****
Last November 12, 2018, around 5:00 AM, my wife woke me up in
a hushed and excited voice. She flashed the pregnancy test on my face and it
took me about 10 seconds to realize what she’s saying. I thought it was a dream
but there it is, God’s answer to our prayers, in His best time, in His best
way.
What surprised me all the more was when she showed to me all
the other negative pregnancy tests (she kept over the years) as her tears flow
from her eyes. I didn’t know that she has been keeping all those “bad news”
since after getting married…
All the pain, all the weight of the wait suddenly
disappeared and an immense joy filled our hearts because of the two red lines,
no matter how faint the second one was. We kept the great news to ourselves. We
kept it even from our families. We waited until our doctor advised us to have
the ultrasound. In December 1, 2018, the ultrasound detected our baby’s
heartbeat.
God has given us the gift of life, and He has lent to us
another life to love and to nurture.
When the weight of the wait becomes heavier, the rate of your faith should be higher.
Press
on! Greater days are ahead of you through God’s grace.