Every
season has its purpose. In other words, every stage of your life has its
purpose. There is purpose in your waiting season, there is purpose in your
lonely season, and there is purpose in your sowing season. The waiting season
is a tough one. It’s that season when God has promised you something and you
continue to wait for it in faith. It’s then that God stretches our faith.
Without faith, you won’t receive a thing from God. The Message Bible says in
James 1:7-8, “Ask boldly, believingly, without a second thought. People who
“worry their prayers” are like wind-whipped waves. Don’t think you’re going to
get anything from the Master that way…” The lonely season is another common
season. We all go through seasons of loneliness. At times God will isolate you
from familiar people. Sometimes we just need to be alone with the Father to
hear what He’s saying, not what your “bestie” or your “boo” is saying. It’s in
those times God wants to develop us and deposit in us gifts and revelation. On
the other hand, you may be surrounded by people and it seems no one can
empathize with your situation. It’s ok, God is teaching you to depend and lean
on Him, not people. Now, the sowing season is for a harvest. You must plant seeds to
reap a harvest. There may be times you find yourself lending to almost everybody. Or you may be broke and still
giving all you have; tithing your bill money but still trusting God. This may also be a season where you need to sow into the lives of other people. Just know and
believe that your season of harvest is coming.
When
we look at the changing of the natural seasons, we see activity taking place.
The weather changes, birds migrate, leaves fall, and flowers bloom. The same is
true for the seasons in our lives. Different activities begin to take place when seasons change: division from
friends, a shift in your inner circle, a divorce, the loss of a job, a new job, or a move to
a new area. My friend this means two things: God is moving and
your season is changing. **Sometimes there may not be any activity at all that you can see with your natural eyes. But that doesnt mean that God isnt moving.**
Some people are in the winter season where life seems cold and no one understands. Then there is the spring and summer seasons where we coast through life and all is well. Let us not despise any season that we find ourselves in. But we must have a Job-like response to God’s seasons and say, “We take the good days from God—why not also the bad days?” (Job 12:10, MSG)
Some people are in the winter season where life seems cold and no one understands. Then there is the spring and summer seasons where we coast through life and all is well. Let us not despise any season that we find ourselves in. But we must have a Job-like response to God’s seasons and say, “We take the good days from God—why not also the bad days?” (Job 12:10, MSG)
You’ll
know when God has changed a season in your life because much like the weather,
there is nothing you can do to change it. For instance, when its winter time,
its winter time. As much as you want it to be summer, all you can do is wait it
out. You can go outside with shorts and a tank top on if you want to; but you
will freeze to death. You might as well dress warm and make the most of the
winter season. There is a purpose for your winter season. It doesn’t have to be
a waste of time. What I’m saying is some of the circumstances in our lives are
beyond our control. All we can do is trust our Faithful Creator to see us
through that season. As people of God, we need to start acting like people of
God and seek His face about our seasons. We need to seek God about everything, especially our
seasons. We need to ask God, “What season am I in? What do you want me to
produce in this season? What are you trying to teach me in this time in my
life?” It was Bishop T.D. Jakes that said, “You can’t pray away God’s seasons.”
We try to bargain with God or tell God to “move” on our behalf when the fact is
we should be asking God for the strength and wisdom to endure that season. “Even
the birds in the sky know the right times to
do things. The storks, doves, swifts, and thrushes
know when it is time to migrate. But
my people don’t know what the Lord wants them to do,” God says in Jeremiah 8:7.
For
[it is] better to suffer [unjustly] for doing right, if that should be God’s
will, than to suffer [justly] for doing wrong (1
Peter 3:17, Amplified Bible). Let me say this, sometimes we
create our own winter seasons by being disobedient. By living in disobedience
to God’s word and His will we welcome frustration, heartache, and pain in our
own lives. If your season has changed due to disobedience and sin, ask God for
forgiveness and help. He’s ever gracious and can turn it around for your good. The
infamous Romans 8:28 says we know that all things work together for good to
those who love God, to those who are the called according to His
purpose.
The Bible says, “…those who suffer as God wants should
trust their souls to the faithful Creator as they continue to do what is right (1
Peter 4:17-19, NCV). Continue to do right in the eyes of God. You have purpose.
Your seasons have purpose. Don’t waste your God given time wishing and praying
for another season. Be fruitful in this season. Don’t jump ahead of God and do
things out of season, but listen to Him. Discover what God wants for you during
this particular time in your life. Enduring the challenging seasons of life is
not easy. But we have the Holy Spirit to help us. God will help us.
He will answer us. He will keep us. David said, “I would
have lost heart, unless I had believed that I would
see the goodness of the Lord in the land of the living”
(Psalm 27:13). We will see His goodness.
We can
trust God no matter what it looks like, how long we’ve been waiting, or how
many tears fall. He is trustworthy. He is a God of purpose and order. Trust that
He has given your life purpose and He will do everything according to His
divine order. Don’t miss your purpose in this season!
But as for me, I trust in You, O Lord; I say, "You are my God. My times are in Your hand..." Psalms 31:14-15
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