There will always be those who have not peeped into your vision but will speak on it as though they authored it. The ones that have never been privy to the master potter’s blueprint of your dream but esteem themselves as the expert in your field.
They dial, and set forth from their dwellings, in a guise to sympathise and encourage, but like a ferocious wolf in sheep’s clothing, when they console, they point fingers, attack, engage in acts designed to mutilate the core of your countenance and override the potter’s settings. They whisper “facts” about your circumstance but within the whisper, lay a hiss of venom designed to poison your dream. They hiss and spittle and injudiciously speculate that your impediment is aroused by karma and the sins of your past, or the deficiency of a masculine prayer life, or inability to break the generational curse.
We see this with Job’s friends who set out to console him but in the end, blamed him for his predicament. Zophar said to Job “…if you devote your heart to Him (God) and stretch out your hands to Him, if you put away the sin that is in your hand and allow no evil to dwell in your tent, then, free of fault, you will lift up your face; you will stand firm and without fear” (Job 11:13–15). Job’s friends clearly spoke on things that were beyond their wisdom. But they were empowered to speak and override the settings to obscure God’s plans for Job, by Job himself, who also spoke before he fully understood the potter’s plan. Job may have initially confronted the adversity with confidence, refusing to blame God for his adversity (Job 2), but one page later and the next several chapters forward, he began to speak prematurely and bleakly about his position.

We may not understand where we are and why things are as they appear to be, but there is wisdom in trusting that there is a potter directing us. An artisan who constantly remains at work, shaping our future such that it becomes brighter than we could ever fashioned for ourselves (Psalm 121:3–5; Jeremiah 18:3–7). Only the potter, the master architect knows the end from the beginning. When we speak from our current but temporary position, we speak as the fool that concludes the end of the book, having only read to page twenty-eight of a hundred.
Our location and position are never a surprise to God. He already knows the whole story. And hence, when Job and his friends spoke prematurely about matters which they had no knowledge of, God spoke and said, “Who is this that obscures my plans with words without knowledge? Brace yourself like a man; I will question you, and you shall answer me. “Where were you when I laid the earth’s foundation? Tell me, if you understand. Who marked off its dimensions? Surely you know! Who stretched a measuring line across it? On what were its footings set, or who laid its cornerstone—while the morning stars sang together and all the angels[a] shouted for joy?” (Job 38:1–7; see also Job 40:2).
Waiting may be painful, but the end will leave you in reverence of the mysteries of the timekeeper. While waiting, do not allow those that do not understand the ways of God, nor His perfect plan for your life, to vocalise their opinions such that they echo and bind louder than His voice. The dilettantes will always be there. With no expertise, they will take one look at your situation, see the stone chosen by the master builder, and reject it without knowing the building with which the master builder chose it for (Matthew 21:42).
Just like Job, you may be exposed and where he was, or like Joseph, you may be waiting twenty-two years for the dream to come to pass, but do not despair. As with both Job and Joseph, God knows your exact position, and He knows how your story will end (Proverbs 20:24; Isaiah 46:10). It will be magnificent! Your situation now is the stone that looks counterproductive but will become the cornerstone of marvel to all those who see the power of God at work in you when the design is complete (Matthew 21:42). If you keep silent and trust that the master builder has a perfect plan for your life, you will come out on the other side as Job and Joseph did; simply triumphant! (Job 42 and Genesis 41–47).
©Katie Mliswa and MomentsbyKatie.M, 2019.
