"It came to pass
after a while, that the brook dried up, because there had been no rain in the
land"
(1 Kings 17:7).
(1 Kings 17:7).
Week after week, with unfaltering and steadfast spirit, Elijah
watched that dwindling brook; often tempted to stagger through unbelief, but
refusing to allow his circumstances to come between himself and God. Unbelief
sees God through circumstances, as we sometimes see the sun shorn of his rays
through smoky air; but faith puts God between itself and circumstances, and
looks at them through Him. And so the dwindling brook became a silver thread;
and the silver thread stood presently in pools at the foot of the largest
boulders; and the pools shrank. The birds fled; the wild creatures of field and
forest came no more to drink; the brook was dry. Only then to his patient and
unwavering spirit, "the word of the Lord came, saying, Arise, get thee to
Zarephath."
Most of us would have gotten anxious and worn with planning long
before that. We should have ceased our songs as soon as the streamlet caroled
less musically over its rocky bed; and with harps swinging on the willows, we
should have paced to and fro upon the withering grass, lost in pensive thought.
And probably, long ere the brook was dry, we should have devised some plan, and
asking God's blessing on it, would have started off elsewhere.
God often does extricate us, because His mercy endureth forever;
but if we had only waited first to see the unfolding of His plans, we should
never have found ourselves landed in such an inextricable labyrinth; and we
should never have been compelled to retrace our steps with so many tears of
shame. Wait, patiently wait!
--F. B. Meyer
--F. B. Meyer
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