Is God Really Making You Wait — or Are You Delaying the Breakthrough?

christian woman praying for breakthrough

Is God Really Making You Wait — or Are You Delaying the Breakthrough?

By Rev. Nehemiah Maxwell

Waiting on God can be one of the hardest seasons of life — especially for Christian women who are praying for marriage, purpose, or a breakthrough from God. You’ve done everything “right,” yet doors stay closed and silence lingers. The waiting season becomes a wilderness. But here’s a question you may have never asked yourself:

Is God really making you wait… or is He waiting on you?

This message is especially for Christian women who feel stuck — in their singleness, in their calling, or in their ministry assignment. If that’s you, keep reading. This may be the breakthrough perspective your spirit has been crying out for.

When Waiting Becomes a Passive Excuse

It’s easy to say “I’m waiting on God” — and yes, sometimes that’s true. But often, that phrase becomes a spiritual mask for passivity. It can become a way of avoiding deeper prayer, fasting, or asking the hard questions.

God’s delays are not always denials, but neither are they always His doing. In many cases, God is ready — but He’s calling us to rise up into action, surrender, or clarity.

Hannah Didn’t Just Wait — She Pressed In

Consider Hannah in 1 Samuel 1. She wanted a child, but years passed. She could’ve resigned herself with “If God wants me to have a child, He’ll give me one.”

Instead, she got alone with God and cried out in desperation. Her prayer wasn’t casual — it was painful, raw, and determined. She refused to be silent. That kind of spiritual breakthrough came because she pressed in.

➡️ Spiritual lesson: Some answers only come when you contend in prayer, not when you sit back and hope.

This Isn’t About Desperation to Marry

This isn’t a plea to become desperate for a husband. That can lead to heartbreak. It’s about becoming desperate to know God’s voice and God’s will.

When you press into God’s presence with clarity and surrender, He will guide you toward the right relationships — and protect you from the wrong ones.

Jacob Refused to Let Go — and Everything Changed

In Genesis 32, Jacob wrestled with God all night. He said, “I will not let You go until You bless me.

That level of pursuit brings spiritual breakthrough. Jacob’s name — and destiny — was changed that night. Some blessings only come to those who refuse to let go until heaven responds.

Are You Tolerating the Delay?

Some of us are tolerating delay, disappointment, or cycles of confusion for too long. We call it “waiting on God,” but it’s really just getting comfortable with delay.

Could it be that God is waiting on you to say, “Enough is enough — I want Your will and I want clarity”?

How to Pursue Breakthrough with God

  1. Get alone with God. Set aside quiet time and space — not just once, but regularly.
  2. Fast if God leads you. Clear your spirit from distractions and idols.
  3. Pray with honesty and fire. Be real. Pour out your frustrations, longings, and questions.
  4. Ask specific questions. “Lord, is there anything in me that’s blocking this breakthrough?”
  5. Contend like Jacob. Refuse to walk away until something in you — or around you — shifts.

This Is Your Moment

Maybe you’ve fasted before. Maybe you’ve prayed. But this is different. This is a call to say, “God, I’m done living in limbo. Show me what You want. Show me what I need to confront, change, or believe.”

Breakthrough often comes to those who say: I will not let You go until You bless me.

He’s not far. He’s not ignoring you. But He may be waiting for your full pursuit.

Final Word

You were not created to live stuck. This is your turning point. Step into the season where your prayer life becomes your pathway to clarity, healing, and divine alignment.

God might not be making you wait — He might be waiting on you.


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FAQs About Waiting on God

How do I know if I’m really waiting on God or avoiding action?

Check your heart. Are you actively seeking God in prayer and surrender — or passively hoping things change on their own? Real waiting includes faithful pursuit and obedience.

Is it wrong to want a breakthrough quickly?

No, but it becomes unhealthy when impatience leads to compromise. God honors hunger, but we must seek His will — not just our timeline.

What if I’ve fasted and prayed before and still see no change?

Sometimes it’s not about repeating actions but shifting your mindset or removing distractions. Press in again, and ask the Holy Spirit to show you what’s different this time.

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