
WE NEED TO TRUST GOD IN THE MEAN TIME
Luke 7:18-23
Luk 7: 18 John’s disciples reported all these things to him. So John called two of his disciples
Luk 7: 19 and sent them to Jesus to ask, “Are you the one who is to come, or should we be looking for another?”
Luk 7: 20 When the men came to Jesus, they said, “John the Baptist has sent us to you to ask, ‘Are you the one who is to come, or should we be looking for another?'”
Luk 7: 21 At that exact time Jesus had cured many people of diseases, sicknesses, and evil spirits, and granted sight to many who had been blind.
Luk 7:22 So he responded to them, “Go tell John what you have seen and heard: The blind are seeing, the lame are walking, lepers are being cleansed, the deaf are hearing, the dead are being raised, the poor have good news proclaimed to them.
Luk 7: 23 Blessed is anyone who takes no offence at me.”
the bits that have not happened
John’s struggle in that prison cell is one of the most honest moments in the Gospels. He had staked everything on the conviction that Jesus was the Lamb of God—the One who would take away the sin of the world. He had proclaimed it boldly, without hesitation. But time passed. Jesus had not yet offered Himself. The great act of deliverance had not yet unfolded. Rome still ruled. Evil still seemed to flourish. And John, who had once thundered with certainty, now sat in the dark wondering whether he had misunderstood the very mission he was born to announce.
What is beautiful is how Jesus responds. He does not scold John for asking the question. He does not shame him for wrestling with doubt. Instead, He points John back to the evidence of God’s unfolding plan. The blind were receiving sight. The lame were walking. The lepers were cleansed. The deaf were hearing. The poor were being given hope. These were not random acts of kindness; they were the very signs Isaiah had said would accompany God’s salvation. In other words, Jesus was saying, “John, the plan is moving forward. You didn’t mishear. You didn’t misinterpret. You were right about Me. You just haven’t seen the whole story yet.”
That is where this passage reaches into our own lives. We, too, live in the tension between what God has already done and what He has not yet completed. We know the Lamb has been sacrificed. We know deliverance from sin has been accomplished. But we still wait for the fullness of redemption—for justice to roll down, for every tear to be wiped away, for the world to be made whole. And in that waiting, we sometimes wonder whether we misunderstood God’s timing or misread His intentions.
Yet Jesus’ message to John becomes His message to us: look at what God is doing. Look at the lives being restored, the hearts being healed, the grace being poured out. The plan has not been derailed. Our patience is not wasted. Waiting itself becomes an act of worship, a declaration that we trust the God who finishes everything He begins.
LORD, we wait for the fullness of Your plan, and we trust You in the meantime, knowing that every unfinished piece will one day be completed by Your faithful hand.








