Day 2—The Keynote of Life

Genesis 49:18 - I wait for Your salvation, O LORD.

It is not easy to say exactly in what sense Jacob used these words, as part of his prophecies regarding the future of his sons. But they do dictate that both for himself and for them his expectation was from God alone. It was God's salvation he waited for; a salvation which God had promised and which God Himself alone could work out. He knew himself and his sons to be under God's charge. Jehovah the Everlasting God would show in them what His saving power is and does. The words suggest to us how there is no salvation but God's salvation, and how waiting on God for that, whether for our personal experience, or in wider circles, is our first duty, our true blessedness.

Let us think of ourselves, and the glorious salvation God has wrought for us in Christ, and is now wanting to work out and to perfect in us by His Spirit. Let us meditate until we somewhat realize that every participation of this great salvation, from moment to moment, must be the work of God Himself. God cannot part with His grace, or goodness, or strength, as an external thing that He gives us as He gives the raindrops from heaven. No; He can only give it, and we can only enjoy it, as He works it Himself directly and unceasingly. And the only reason He does not work it more effectually and continuously is that we do not let Him. We hinder Him either by our indifference or by our self-effort, so He cannot do what He wants. What He asks of us, in the way of surrender, and obedience, and desire, and trust, is all comprised in this one word: waiting on Him, waiting for His salvation


Meditate with me on the divine glory of the salvation God is working out in us, until we know the truths it implies. We can do as little towards the work as towards creating the world, except as God works in us to will and to do. God only asks of us to yield, to consent, to wait upon Him, and He will do it all. And the deep blessed background of all our praying and working will be: "Truly my soul waits upon God." There can be no good but what God works. To wait upon God, and have the heart filled with faith in His working, and in that faith to pray for His mighty power to come down is our only wisdom. Oh, for the eyes of our heart to be opened to see God working in ourselves and in others, and to see how blessed it is to worship and just to wait for His salvation!

Our private and public prayers are our highest expression of our relation to God: it is in them chiefly that our waiting upon God must be exercised. If our waiting begins by quieting the activities of nature and being still before God; if it bows and seeks to see God in His universal and almighty operation; if it yields itself to Him in the assurance that He is working and will work in us; if it maintains the place of humility and stillness and surrenders until God's Spirit has quickened the faith that He will perfect His work: it will indeed become the strength and the joy of the soul. Life will become one deep blessed cry: "I have waited for Your salvation, O LORD."

"My soul, wait only upon God!"