My needs as a cyclist aren't as urgent or longlasting as when I was a hillwalker, but I too liked Goretex. I didn't like waxing an already hot jacket, and even less waxed trousers (my legs agree with Julian!), but found that the construction of Goretex (1) made another strategy feasible: Wash the Goretex jacket in the usual warm water, and dry it in a spin dryer on the hottest temp it is rated for, or iron it with a modestly warm iron. That fluffs up the nap, which creates outer seeping-wet resistance, and the jacket is good to go for considerable time, months sometimes years, depending on wear. If you're one of those people who has to have his jacket washed after every ride, or once a week, you will however wear through the Goretex lining in a matter of months, and even through the nylon of the jacket if it is lightweight gear. I have a hefty Berghaus mountain jacket, same as Chris Bonington wore up Mount Everest, that is probably forty years old and still good for a few hours of steady drizzle. Life for my jacket must seem much lighter as a cyclist's fave cover than as a mountaineer's.
(1) For those who haven't yet discovered the secret: Goretex is just a common good quality dense tent nylon of an appropriate weight for the sport or the ambient temperature or the temporarily fashionable drape of the hoodies on the corner, with a micro layer of one way space age rubbery substance on the inside which provides the wet-outside-dry-inside-(provided you don't sweat more heavily than the combined rating of the materials). Workalikes ditto. More modern protection fabrics may work differently, or at least say they do.