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We live in an "on-demand" world. We want our food fast, fast gratifications and fast internet. If we want something, we buy it. If we feel something, we express it. But in the landscape of love, haste is often a destroyer. It's like a gardener who gets impatient for spring, so they pry open the rosebuds with their fingers to make them bloom. They don't get a flower; they get a dead, torn petal. Today, we are going to look at the biblical principle of waiting, and why maintaining boundaries isn't about restriction, it's about protecting the harvest.
By Stanton PetersenWe live in an "on-demand" world. We want our food fast, fast gratifications and fast internet. If we want something, we buy it. If we feel something, we express it. But in the landscape of love, haste is often a destroyer. It's like a gardener who gets impatient for spring, so they pry open the rosebuds with their fingers to make them bloom. They don't get a flower; they get a dead, torn petal. Today, we are going to look at the biblical principle of waiting, and why maintaining boundaries isn't about restriction, it's about protecting the harvest.