I came across something today that made me pause.
For a season, David was a shepherd.
The next, he was king.
For a season, Ruth was working in the fields.
The next, she was part of something she never could have arranged on her own.
For a season, Mordecai sat outside the palace.
The next, he was brought inside.
It’s easy to read stories like that
and focus on how everything changed.
How quickly things turned.
How differently it all ended.
But that’s not how they lived it.
They lived it in the middle.
In the parts that didn’t feel significant yet.
In the waiting.
In the uncertainty.
In the seasons that probably felt uncomfortable and unclear.
And if I’m honest,
that’s the part I struggle with the most.
I don’t like sitting in seasons that don’t make sense.
I don’t like the feeling of not knowing what God is doing.
I don’t like the stretch, the tension, the waiting.
I want to move through it.
Get to the next thing.
Understand it already.
But when I read stories like these,
I’m reminded of something I don’t always want to remember.
God does some of His deepest work
in the seasons I’m most tempted to rush through.
Not after them.
Not once everything is resolved.
But right there —
in the discomfort.
In the parts that feel slow.
In the places that don’t look like anything is happening yet.
The shepherding.
The field work.
The sitting outside.
None of it was wasted.
And maybe the part I’m standing in right now
isn’t something to escape as quickly as possible.
Maybe it’s something to pay attention to.
Because it might be the very place
God is doing the work I’ll one day be grateful for.
Consider it pure joy, my brothers and sisters, whenever you face trials of many kinds, because you know that the testing of your faith produces perseverance. Let perseverance finish its work
— James 1:2–4 (NIV)