
“You need to persevere so that when you have done the will of God, you will receive what he has promised. For, ‘In just a little while, he who is coming will come and will not delay.’” (Hebrews 10:36–37 NIV)
Pastor, if you’ve been praying for something in your church—or in your own heart—and God seems silent, remember this:
Delay is not denial.
Just because the answer hasn’t come yet doesn’t mean God isn’t listening. It simply means not yet.
Part of spiritual maturity is learning the difference between no and not yet. Between a closed door and a delayed one. The Bible promises, “He who is coming will come and will not delay” (Hebrews 10:37 NIV).
God’s delay is often a test—not to expose weakness, but to build endurance. Anyone can wait once. Faith grows when you keep trusting through the fourth, fifth, and fiftieth time.
Maybe you’ve prayed for revival and haven’t seen fruit.
Maybe you’ve asked God to heal division in your church or restore a relationship that’s still fractured.
Maybe you’ve carried a vision that hasn’t yet come to life. In those seasons, God isn’t ignoring you. He’s growing you.
Testing reveals what’s really inside—and it reminds you of who stands beside you. God uses waiting to deepen your dependence, to remind you that ministry runs on his timetable, not yours.
You may feel weary or even close to giving up. But you’re not finished—and God isn’t either.
His promise still stands.
You can stay with it longer because God is with you. He will give you the strength to press on when your own strength runs out.
Remember, pastor: You’re never a failure until you quit. Stay faithful in the waiting. The One who called you will come through—in his perfect time