Just wait a minute!

We always seem to be waiting for something, and waiting is always hard. It is the same whether we are a young child desperately seeking help or attention from a parent, someone waiting in a queue or a motorist caught in a traffic jam.
It is bad enough when you know what you are waiting for and have some idea how long you will have to wait. But it is much worse when you are asked to wait for something you do not fully understand and when the one who has promised to provide it disappears
Such was the situation of the disciples at the Ascension of Jesus. They would have needed extra patience at a time of some anxiety and uncertainty but also of great expectation and hope.
In this last time when He was with them in His post-Resurrection appearances, Jesus gave the disciples a clear instruction, ‘Do not leave Jerusalem, but wait for the gift My Father promised’ (Acts 1.4[NIV]). There could be no doubt as to what they had to do but did they realise what they were waiting for? Did their minds go back to the hours before Jesus had been arrested when He had spoken to them about promises - of greater work to be done, of another Helper or Counsellor to come, of His peace to be given (John 14.12-31)? Which would it be?
But Jesus gave them a clear indication of which it would be, ‘...in a few days you will be baptised with the Holy Spirit’ (Acts 1.5). Not that that would have calmed all their fears as it was beyond their comprehension for the moment. It may have raised their expectations and increased the excitement of this special day. It certainly would be the key to the fulfilment of the other promises as well.
And Jesus gave them another clear illumination of who He was and the Person who they had come to believe in, the Son of God and their Lord and Saviour, as He was translated from the limitations of this world into the limitless dimensions of the divine world of God’s eternity (Acts 1.9). The disciples would surely have realised, as so often at great moments in the history of Israel, that the cloud which hid Him from their sight in His Ascension was the symbol of God’s presence in all His awesome majesty and power.
‘Just wait a minute!’ is sometimes just a put-off, but it can also be sound advice, especially if we need to get ourselves fully prepared, as the disciples had to, for the work ahead. There are occasions when every Christian needs to wait, for a moment, a minute, a few days, or however long it may be, to be clearly directed and fully empowered by the Holy Spirit for the Lord’s work in His good time.








