How Are You Feeling+FollowTo anyone who feels tired of waiting for God Waiting sounds holy—until you’ve been doing it for years. At first, I was patient. Then I was hopeful. Eventually, I was just tired. That’s when Anna’s story started to feel personal. Luke tells us she waited in the temple for decades. No complaints recorded. No answers quoted. Just time—passing. Scripture doesn’t rush her story. It lets the waiting be the story. If waiting has worn you down, you’re not weak. You’re living the kind of faith the Bible treats with quiet respect—the kind that endures without guarantees. #WaitingOnGod #Anna #FaithOverTime #ChristianAging #BiblicalHope201Share
How Are You Feeling+FollowTo anyone who feels forgotten because nothing happened for years Time didn’t bring answers. It just kept moving. That’s why Anna matters so much to older believers. Luke compresses decades of her life into a single verse. No miracles recorded. No prayers quoted. Just long faithfulness, quietly lived. Scripture doesn’t treat her waiting years as empty space. It honors them as the substance of her faith. If time has made you feel invisible to God, the Bible offers this comfort: some of the deepest faith stories are told almost entirely through waiting—and God still steps into them. #WaitingOnGod #FaithAndTime #Anna #ChristianAging #BiblicalHope11Share
DidYouKnow+FollowGod never promised closure in this life. We like endings that make sense. Apologies received. Wrongs corrected. Stories tied up. But many biblical stories end unresolved. Joseph never fully reconciles with his brothers’ past. Paul dies without seeing the church stabilized. Hebrews praises those who died without receiving what was promised. That matters, because older believers often ache for closure. In family relationships. In faith questions. In prayers that never came full circle. The Bible does not promise resolution before death. It promises remembrance. Your story does not need a clean ending to be held by God. If some chapters of your life remain unfinished, that does not mean they were forgotten. It means they were entrusted. #BibleMisconceptions #FaithAndWaiting #ChristianAging #BiblicalHope #DidYouKnow456Share
How Are You Feeling+FollowGod never promised closure in this life. We like endings that make sense. Apologies received. Wrongs corrected. Stories tied up. But many biblical stories end unresolved. Joseph never fully reconciles with his brothers’ past. Paul dies without seeing the church stabilized. Hebrews praises those who died without receiving what was promised. That matters, because older believers often ache for closure. In family relationships. In faith questions. In prayers that never came full circle. The Bible does not promise resolution before death. It promises remembrance. Your story does not need a clean ending to be held by God. If some chapters of your life remain unfinished, that does not mean they were forgotten. It means they were entrusted. #BibleMisconceptions #FaithAndWaiting #ChristianAging #BiblicalHope #DidYouKnow988Share
How Are You Feeling+FollowTo anyone who feels forgotten because time keeps passing I kept thinking, “If God were going to act, He would have by now.” Then I paid attention to Anna in Luke 2. Decades of waiting are summarized in one verse. No complaints recorded. No breakthrough until old age. Scripture doesn’t rush past her years. It honors them. If time has made you feel invisible to God, you’re not alone. Some of the Bible’s most faithful lives are defined not by answers—but by how long they waited. #WaitingOnGod #FaithAndTime #Anna #ChristianAging #BiblicalHope173Share
How Are You Feeling+FollowTo anyone who feels forgotten by God over time Years passed. And nothing dramatic happened. Then I noticed how long Simeon waited. Scripture doesn’t rush his story. Decades are compressed into one quiet sentence. Faith, here, isn’t rewarded with speed—but with presence. The Bible takes aging seriously. It knows waiting can stretch into a lifetime. If you feel overlooked by God because time has passed, you’re not alone. You’re standing inside one of Scripture’s longest silences—and God still stepped into it. #WaitingOnGod #FaithOverTime #Simeon #ChristianAging #BiblicalHope121Share
How Are You Feeling+FollowTo anyone who feels tired of waiting Waiting didn’t make me patient. It made me bitter. Then I read about Simeon. The Greek says he was prosdechomenos—actively waiting. Not passive. Not calm. Waiting with longing that never shut down. Scripture never romanticizes waiting. It treats it as work. Emotional labor. Spiritual endurance. If waiting has worn you down, you’re not doing it wrong. You’re doing the hardest kind of faith there is. #WaitingOnGod #SpiritualEndurance #Simeon #FaithInAging #BiblicalHope232Share