This morning, in our series ‘The Miraculous & The Mundane’, we looked at the topic of ‘Seasons of the Soul.’ In nature, we have in our country four distinct seasons (spring, summer, autumn and winter), and each season brings with it different weather and different advantages and disadvantages. There is change in each season we cannot control, but there is also consistency, regularity and purpose in the seasons. After the flood, God promised, “As long as the earth endures, seedtime and harvest, cold and heat, summer and winter, day and night will never cease.” (Gen 8:22) We see that ‘there is a time for everything, and a season for every activity under the heavens’ (Eccl 3:1), and just as there are specific times for things to happen in nature, so our spiritual lives can seem to go through different seasons!
Most of us prefer spring and summer, when new life is happening, flowers blossom and we enjoy warmer weather. Autumn is a time of riotous colours and harvesting. Few of us like the barrenness and cold of winter. Similarly, in our lives, we want to feel the presence of God close to us and enjoy fruitfulness all the time, but we must also learn to navigate those more difficult spiritual seasons when perhaps God feels distant and we do not see what He is doing.
Navigating the seasons of the soul requires perspective, patience and perseverance. Without these three Ps, our lives will be at the whim of our feelings, and we will be tossed about (see Eph 4:14). Having perspective means seeing things from God’s point of view and understanding that the difficult seasons don’t last forever. As Paul puts it, ‘our light and momentary troubles are achieving for us an eternal glory that far outweighs them all. So we fix our eyes not on what is seen, but on what is unseen, since what is seen is temporary, but what is unseen is eternal.’ (2 Cor 4:17-18)
Patience means learning to wait for God (see Ps 27:14, Ps 33:20, Ps 37:7). There are lessons for us to learn from the Biblical principles of crop rotation and leaving land fallow (see Lev 25:1-7). It is counter-intuitive to us to leave land fallow, but this helps the soil to be refreshed and ultimately to be more fruitful. Similarly, those periods in our lives when nothing seems to be happening and God does not seem to be answering our prayers are times when we learn to lean more on Him and to grow in trust.
Perseverance is ‘patience plus’! Perseverance means we do what is right despite difficulty or delay in achieving success. If we persevere, James says, we may ‘be mature and complete, not lacking anything.’ (James 1:4) Moses persevered because he saw ‘him who is invisible.’ (Heb 11:27) Our perspective fuels our perseverance; we have to keep on doing what is right, no matter how we feel.
Whatever season of the soul we are currently facing, God is still with us. Paul reminds the Philippians that he is confident ‘that he who began a good work in you will carry it on to completion until the day of Christ Jesus.’ (Phil 1:6) With perspective, patience and perseverance, we can live through every season of the soul and know the joy of meeting the Lord face to face one day and being welcomed into His presence. Don’t give up.