Worship While You Wait: How Divine Delays Reveal Daily Miracles
When God’s Timeline Rewrites Ours
Ashlyn Miner grew up wanting to serve a mission. Then came the curveball—foot and ankle problems, surgeries, therapy, and a hard phone call that meant waiting. That pause cut across her plans, but it opened a quieter classroom with God. In her words, Isaiah 40:31 stopped being just a favorite verse and became muscle memory: waiting on the Lord renews strength. The delay didn’t diminish her desire; it deepened it. By the time the call finally arrived, she loved her mission even more because she’d learned to love the Lord in the gap. If you’ve ever had a holy desire meet a hard detour, you’ll recognize the texture of her story: the questions, the surrender, and then—somewhere in the middle—the steadying sense that God was not late. He was close, patient, and purposeful, building something in the waiting that couldn’t be built any other way.
Sacred Waiting and the Strength We Don’t See Forming
Ashlyn describes waiting not as spiritual idling but as sacred strengthening. The image of “mounting up with wings as eagles” grew practical: God’s timing taught her endurance, tenderness, and discernment. She noticed how divine delays often reframe our expectations without diminishing God’s promises. “The Lord’s delays are not His denials,” she says—words forged in her heart, not just the study journal. Emma echoes the sentiment, reminding us that post-mission (and really, at any life stage) God sometimes slows our pace to shape our hearts. We can resist that or receive it. Ashlyn chose to receive it, and the fruit was gratitude, reverence, and a joyful sense that the Lord wastes no season. In a world that equates speed with success, this conversation invites us to honor process—learning to worship, work, and rest in the in-between, trusting that God’s hands are steady even when our plans aren’t.
A Simple Practice: Weekly Emails and Remembering Miracles
Back home, Ashlyn felt prompted in the temple to revive her “mission-style” weekly emails—short notes to family with a thought, a scripture, and a record of miracles. At first, she wondered if there’d be anything to write—no daily street lessons, no nonstop appointments. Then she started noticing: a tender conversation here, a small answered prayer there, a wave of peace that didn’t match the moment. Remembering created recognition. The act of writing trained her eyes and heart to see God’s signatures in the everyday. If your week feels painfully ordinary, take a page from Ashlyn’s book: set a reminder, jot a few lines, and name what God did. You might be surprised how the Spirit turns memory into momentum. The stories don’t need to be big to be holy. Often, the smallest mercies are the loudest proofs: He’s here. He’s kind. He’s carrying you still.
Guided Steps: When Counsel Confirms the Quiet Nudge
For weeks, Ashlyn felt unsettled about her academic plan—practicum timing, extra classes, the choice between internship and student teaching. Then her boss, who also oversees program processes, pulled her in to suggest a more humane path: shift classes, delay practicum, choose student teaching, and still graduate on time. Peace arrived mid-conversation, and prayer sealed it. “I wouldn’t have come to this on my own,” Ashlyn admits, “but God placed people to help me choose well.” Emma connects this to a beloved principle: keep covenants, act on good thoughts, and trust that heaven can steer a moving ship. Not every answer flashes neon; sometimes it arrives through wise mentors, calendar edits, and the feel of relief that follows the right decision. The miracle isn’t merely the outcome—it’s the orchestration. God is in the details, and He often sends the right voice at the right hour.
“But If Not”: Courage for Outcomes We Can’t Control
The conversation crescendos with Daniel’s “but if not” faith. God can deliver—and He often does—but even if He doesn’t do it our way or on our timeline, we’ll still worship. Emma parallels this with Alma’s people praying in their hearts, a quieter bravery that God honored differently, but just as surely. The message is not to minimize desire; it’s to right-size it under discipleship. Faith in Jesus Christ outruns faith in outcomes. That shift frees us to move forward, led by scripture, sacrament, and small daily obediences, without the brittle anxiety of perfect control. Ashlyn’s witness lands tenderly: God’s goodness never runs out. He was faithful then; He is faithful now. If you’re carrying a hope that feels overdue, this is your invitation—worship while you wait, keep writing your miracles, take the next good step, and trust the same God who rescued then to walk with you now.

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