Cover Image: On Waiting Well

On Waiting Well

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I received an ARC from Moody Publisher via NetGalley. This review is my personal opinion.

I must say I have read many books about waiting and this one has a biblical and interesting approach. I like that everyone can read the book without problems As Bradley Baurain says in his book, none likes to voluntarily wait. How we tend to see waiting as a dessert and we pray for a fast solution. I know we all can relate to that, one of my favorite quotes says” Waiting is a privilege, a pleasure, a step toward a deeper understanding and a richer experience of His boundless love for us”. I must say all my life I hear about the waiting season, in this book Bradley Burain explain to us how waiting is must be an important aspect of our Christian life.

The three myths of waiting open my eyes to the truth, waiting is not: passive, purples, and painful. I like this “Our faith and faith matter greatly to God, but nothing we will do can accelerate of toward His plans. He will accomplish them in the right way at the right time with His intended result”. What I like the most about this book is that brings a fresh and new perspective to a known theme, the constant reminder that we are not alone, God knows exactly what he is doing. It brings me hope and joy.

I believe this book is a must-read for everyone, we need to learn how to stop running and fear waiting, to grow and get closer to God in those unexpected pauses. The discussion questions could be a further blessing to those who struggle and need encouragement.

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There aren't many books on waiting well and it is an important discussion for believers. This is well written and biblical and I recommend it.
I received a complimentary copy of this book from the publisher for the purpose of an honest review.

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Throughout the Bible, we can see people that had to wait for God’s timing. We know that’s true, but how are we supposed to do that? On Waiting Well tells what biblical waiting entails and how it works.

There are some things I can wait for without any problems, but most of the time I get antsy. Waiting on God is something I know needs to happen, but it isn’t always easy. That’s the main reason this book caught my attention. It’s simple to talk about waiting, it’s a lot harder to follow through with it. The book isn’t going to make you absolutely patient when it comes to waiting, nor is it meant to. Bradley Baurain gives you practical help in getting better at waiting.

What really stood out to me is that waiting on God means not only being patient for His timing, but serving Him in the meantime. It isn’t about sitting in a chair until God acts, but continuing to seek Him and do what we know He wants us to do. As it says in the book, “There is no wasted time in God’s plan.”

I received a complimentary copy from the publisher through NetGalley. All opinions are my own.

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Waiting Well is an in-depth study on waiting well while waiting for God's answer and direction' A good book to read any time.

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First sentence: Do you enjoy waiting as much as I do? I love to find a long line and a slow cashier for checking out at the grocery store. Doing so gives me an opportunity to contemplate my need for turkey jerky and to read the covers of fascinating magazines. I love to be put on hold when making a phone call—such great music! I love arriving for an eye appointment and being shown to a room, tastefully decorated with high-definition illustrations of cataract surgery, that has been specially designed for me to wait in. None of this is true, of course, which means you almost certainly do enjoy waiting as much as I do, that is to say, not at all. We find waiting in daily life to be boring, tiresome, and unfortunately inevitable.

If you have a pulse...then chances are you could benefit from reading Bradley Baurain's book on WAITING. The book tackles several different aspects of waiting--what he likes to call the "small w" and and "the big W." Examples of the "small w" would be actual waiting we do in our daily lives--waiting in traffic, waiting for an elevator, waiting in a check-out line, waiting for an appointment, waiting to get grades back, waiting for (medical) test results, waiting to get over a cold, waiting for a package to arrive, etc. Examples of "the big W" are typically more significant and often have a spiritual element to them. We may be annoyed by the first, but it's the second that gives us a greater opportunity to have faith, trust God, believe His promises, and lean hard on grace.

He also makes a distinction--or tries at any rate--between waiting on the Lord and waiting for the Lord. (I honestly tried to process this distinction. But I struggled. I believe both are seen in Scripture, used in Scripture in various translations.)

I loved it when he shared three MYTHS about waiting and follows up with three TRUTHS about waiting. (Chapters three and four!)

I also loved chapter six, "What Are We Waiting For?" he shares SEVEN answers that help clarify the "big W." Rescue. Promises. Salvation. Justice. Grace. Forgiveness. Christ's Return. He gives each one it's turn--and in doing so gives a good, solid foundation for HOPE.

Overall, I thought this was a book worth reading.

Quotes:
"By any name—attitude, orientation, choice, habit, discipline, virtue, or practice—learning to wait on the Lord is an essential, transformative, and rewarding dimension of spiritual formation. This perspective is countercultural and unexpected: waiting is positive. It is not merely a “dry season” or something we need to escape. Rightly conceived, spiritual waiting is a crucial, ongoing dimension of following Christ and loving God. It’s a vital part of our Christian pilgrimage."
"Waiting is a privilege, a pleasure, a step toward a deeper understanding of God and a richer experience of His boundless love for us."
"God cannot do His work without His and our waiting His time: let waiting be our work, as it is His. And if His waiting be nothing but goodness and graciousness, let ours be nothing but a rejoicing in that goodness, and a confident expectancy of that grace. And let every thought of waiting become to us simply the expression of unmingled and unutterable blessedness, because it brings us to a God who waits that He may make Himself known to us perfectly as the Gracious One."
"A fuller understanding of waiting can over time transform both our beliefs and our practices—and thus our experiences and our feelings about those experiences. It might also work in the other direction, that is, if we take a stand on what the Word says and act as though waiting on the Lord is important and fundamentally pleasurable, waiting will begin to feel pleasurable and thereby transform our beliefs. Whether the flow is from biblical beliefs to our actions, or from biblical actions to our beliefs, this is all likely to be a slow change."
"We cannot wait on the Lord and at the same time disobey His commandments, nor can we wait on the Lord and at the same time pridefully seek our own glory."
"As we’ve seen in the first two chapters, the Christian life is very much one of waiting for the Lord and waiting on the Lord. If we’re not doing one or both of these, we’re almost certainly not seeking God’s glory, and we’re probably also not thinking, speaking, or acting in faith. This is biblically true. But what is also often experientially true is that waiting can feel difficult and painful. Learning how to wait—which might be pursued as an attitude, orientation, choice, habit, discipline, virtue, or practice—as part of our spiritual maturing is sadly not a high priority for many of us in the church today."

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