A question echoes through the Psalms with surprising honesty: “How long?” In Psalm 79 5, the writer cries, “How long, O LORD? Will you be angry forever?” It sounds a bit like children in the back seat asking, “Are we there yet?” except the stakes are much higher. Life has a way of placing us in seasons where answers seem delayed and relief feels distant. In those moments, the question rises naturally. We may be walking through a trial, facing uncertainty, or waiting for something to change, and the silence can feel heavy. The Psalmist does not pretend otherwise. He brings the question directly to God, acknowledging both the struggle and the longing for resolution.
That struggle with waiting is not confined to ancient songs. It shows up in daily life in ways that are both familiar and uncomfortable. Waiting often feels like wasted time, and many of us would prefer to move things along ourselves. Saul did exactly that when he grew impatient and took matters into his own hands, with results that did not end well. Adam and Eve made a similar choice when they decided they could not trust God’s timing or His intentions. It is humbling to admit how quickly we follow the same path. When nothing seems to be happening, we assume nothing is happening. Yet someone wisely said, “Something actually happens while nothing is happening.” Waiting has a way of revealing what we believe about God. It tests whether we trust Him or whether we quietly believe we could manage things better on our own, which, if we are honest, has not always worked out as planned.
The New Testament brings clarity and hope to this tension. Jesus spoke about waiting in terms of promise and purpose. He said, “I go to prepare a place for you… I will come again and will take you to myself” (John 14:2-3). Waiting, then, is not empty. It is filled with expectation. The apostle Peter reminds us, “The Lord is not slow to fulfill his promise… but is patient toward you” (2 Peter 3:9). What feels like delay is often patience at work. In Christ, waiting is not simply enduring time. It is being shaped by it. As Isaiah wrote, strength is renewed in those who wait, and through Jesus, that promise finds its deeper meaning. Even when the question remains, “How long?” it rests alongside the assurance that God has not forgotten His people.
