| Daily DevotionWaiting on God: For All Saints By Andrew Murray
 “Let none  that wait on Thee be ashamed.” Psalm 25:3 Let us now,  in our meditation of today, each one forget himself, to think of the great  company of God, saints throughout the world, who are all with us waiting on  Him. And let us all join in the fervent prayer for each other, “Let none that  wait on Thee be ashamed.” Just think  for a moment of the multitude of waiting ones who need that prayer; how many  there are, sick and weary and solitary, to whom it is as if their prayers are  not answered, and who sometimes begin to fear that their hope will be put to  shame. And then, how many servants of God, ministers or missionaries, teachers  or workers, of various name, whose hopes in their work have been disappointed,  and whose longing for power and blessing remains unsatisfied. And then, too,  how many, who have heard of a life of rest and perfect peace, of abiding light  and fellowship, of strength and victory, and who cannot find the path.   With all  these, it is nothing but that they have not yet learned the secret of full  waiting upon God. They just need, what we all need, the living assurance that  waiting on God can never be in vain. Let us remember all who are in danger of  fainting or being weary, and all unite in the cry, “Let none that wait on Thee  be ashamed!”  If this  intercession for all who wait on God becomes part of our waiting on Him for  ourselves, we shall help to bear each other’s burdens, and so fulfil the law of  Christ.  There will  be introduced into our waiting on God that element of unselfishness and love,  which is the path to the highest blessing, and the fullest communion with God.  Love to the brethren and love to God are inseparably linked. In God, the love  to His Son and to us are one: “That the love wherewith Thou hast loved Me, may  be in them.” In Christ,  the love of the Father to Him, and His love to us, are one: “As the Father  loved me, so have I loved you.” In us, He asks that His love to us shall be  ours to the brethren: “As I have loved you, that ye love one another.” All the  love of God, and of Christ, are inseparably linked with love to the brethren.  And how can we, day by day, prove and cultivate this love otherwise than by  daily praying for each other?   Christ did  not seek to enjoy the Father’s love for Himself; He passed it all on to us. All  true seeking of God and His love for ourselves, will be inseparably linked with  the thought and the love of our brethren in prayer for them. “Let none  that wait on Thee be ashamed.” Twice in the psalm David speaks of his waiting  on God for himself; here he thinks of all who wait on Him. Let this page take  the message to all God’s tried and weary ones, that there are more praying for  them than they know. Let it stir them and us in our waiting to make a point of  at times forgetting ourselves, and to enlarge our hearts, and say to the  Father, “These all wait upon Thee, and Thou givest them their meat in due  season”.  Let it  inspire us all with new courage-for who is there who is not at times ready to  faint and be weary? “Let none that wait on Thee be ashamed” is a promise in a  prayer, “They that wait on Thee shall not be ashamed”! From many  and many a witness the cry comes to every one who needs the help, brother,  sister, tried one, “Wait on the Lord; be of good courage, and He shall  strengthen your heart; wait, I say, on the Lord. Be of good courage, and He  shall strengthen your heart, all ye that wait on the Lord.” 
		  Blessed  Father! We humbly  beseech Thee, Let none that wait on Thee be ashamed; no, not one. Some are  weary, and the time of waiting appears long. And some are feeble, and scarcely  know how to wait. And some are so entangled in the effort of their prayers and  their work, they think that they can find no time to wait continually.
 Father!  teach us all how to wait.
 Teach us to  think of each other, and pray for each other.
 Teach us to  think of Thee, the God of all waiting ones.
 Father! Let  none that wait on Thee be ashamed.
 For Jesus’  sake. Amen.
 “My soul,  wait thou only upon God!” Related Links: Can God change your life?God has made it possible for you to know Him and experience an amazing change in your own life. 
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 About the author:  Andrew Murray (1828-1917), was born in Cape Town, South Africa and became a revered missionary leader in the late 1800s and early 1900s, promoting and establishing missions in South Africa. His Devotion writings are considered classics of the Christian faith. This Devotion is taken from Murray's series of writings titled, Waiting on God.  
	
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