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What the Bible Says About Waiting a Long Time for Answers to Prayer

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If you have walked with the Lord for any length of time, you know this trial well. You poured out your heart in prayer—for healing, for a prodigal child, for financial deliverance, for the salvation of a loved one, for direction in a dark valley—only to hear… silence. Not for weeks. Not for months. For years. Sometimes decades. The enemy whispers, “God doesn’t care. He has forgotten you.” The world mocks your faith. Yet the Bible, from Genesis to Revelation, gives one clear, unchanging answer: **long waiting is not divine neglect—it is divine design.** God’s people have always waited. And in that waiting, He forges faith that cannot be shaken. The Patriarchs: Twenty-Five Years of Waiting on a Promise Abraham was seventy-five when God promised him a son who would become a great nation (Genesis 12:4). Twenty-five years passed—through famine, doubt, and the tragic mistake of Hagar—before Isaac was born when Abraham was one hundred years old. Scripture records: “And so, after he had patien...

The God Who Uses the Fallen: How the Lord Redeems and Empowers Backslidden Women and Girls in Scripture

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 In a world that measures worth by perfection, social status, or a spotless past, the Bible stands as a glorious counter-testimony. Our God is not ashamed to use the broken, the fallen, and the backslidden. He chooses “the foolish things of the world to confound the wise… and base things… and things which are despised” (1 Corinthians 1:27-28). And time after time, He has done this most strikingly through women and girls—those the culture often overlooked or condemned. If you are a woman carrying the weight of past sin, a backslider who has wandered far from the fold, or a young girl wondering whether God could ever use someone “like you,” this post is for you. The same sovereign grace that reached Rahab, Tamar, Bathsheba, Gomer, the Samaritan woman, Mary Magdalene, and the little maid is still available today. Rahab the Harlot: From Jericho’s Shame to the Messiah’s Line Rahab lived in Jericho, a city marked for destruction. Her house sat on the wall, and her profession was prostitu...

Exploring Gideon's Fleece Test: When Weak Faith Meets a Gracious God - Judges 6:36–40

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If the Call of Gideon (Judges 6:11–24) shows us how God chooses the weak and fearful to do His work, the fleece test reveals something even more tender: **how God patiently deals with our lingering doubts**. Right after the Angel of the Lord declared him a “mighty man of valor,” built the altar “The Lord Is Peace,” and gave Gideon his first assignment, the new leader still wrestled with fear. The Midianite hordes were still camped in the valley. The odds were still impossible. So Gideon turned to the Lord with a bold, honest request that has puzzled and encouraged believers for centuries. Here is the text (ESV): > 36 Then Gideon said to God, “If you will save Israel by my hand as you have said, 37 behold, I am laying a fleece of wool on the threshing floor. If there is dew on the fleece alone, and it is dry on all the ground, then I shall know that you will save Israel by my hand, as you have said.” 38 And it was so. When he rose early the next morning and squeezed the fleece, he wr...

The Cultivation of Gideon

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"Throw down the altar of Baal that thy father hath, and cut down the grove that is by it." — Judges 6:25 Before Gideon could ever lead an army against the Midianites, God had a work to do *within* Gideon’s own household. We often want the public victory without the private purging, but the "Cultivation of Gideon" teaches us that God’s champions are grown in the soil of uncompromising obedience and the destruction of idols.   The Mandate of Separation In Judges 6:25-32, the Lord’s first command to Gideon was not to strike the enemy, but to strike the sin in his own family. Gideon’s father had an altar to Baal and an Asherah pole—symbols of a compromised nation that had forgotten the Law of Moses. True cultivation begins with **separation**. You cannot build an altar to the Most High God until you have dismantled the altars of the world. Fundamental to the Christian walk is the understanding that God will not share His glory with another. If there is a "grove...

The Call of Gideon: How God Calls Ordinary People to Extraordinary Faith - Judges 6:11–24

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We live in days that feel eerily like the days of Gideon. Moral confusion, cultural pressure, family struggles, and open hostility toward biblical truth surround us. Many conservative Christians look at the headlines and quietly ask the same question Gideon voiced: “If the Lord is with us, why then has all this happened to us?” (Judges 6:13). Yet the story in Judges 6:11–24 does not leave us in despair. It shows how the God of the Bible calls and equips His people—not because we are strong, but precisely because we are weak. The scene opens in crisis. Israel is starving under Midianite oppression. Gideon is threshing wheat—not on an open floor, but hidden inside a winepress, terrified the enemy will spot him and steal what little he has. Then the Angel of the Lord appears and speaks the most shocking words in the chapter:   “The Lord is with you, O mighty man of valor.” (v. 12) Gideon is cowering in fear, the youngest son of a weak family in the weakest clan of Manasseh. Yet G...