šŖ The Long Game
Why Godās work often takes longer than we likeābut itās always worth it.
And the Lord answered me:
āWrite the vision;
make it plain on tablets,
so he may run who reads it.
For still the vision awaits its appointed time;
it hastens to the endāit will not lie.
If it seems slow, wait for it;
it will surely come; it will not delay.ā
āHabakkuk 2:2ā3
A friend once told me that the best time to plant a tree was twenty years ago.
The second-best time? Today.
Thatās how Godās work often feels. You plant something, and for a long time, it looks like nothing is happening. But underground, roots are forming. Slowly, silently, the structure is being built to hold up something lasting.
Itās easy to get discouraged when you donāt see fruit right away. But good fruit always starts underground.
I like things fast.
Fast Wi-Fi. Fast food. Fast answers to prayer.
And when God gives me a vision for somethingālike a thriving church outside a small townāI want to see it take off yesterday.
But God doesnāt microwave revival. He plants seeds. He waters the soil. And then He waits with us.
Thereās a saying Iāve heard more than once, and Iāve come to believe it:
People overestimate what they can do in one year, and underestimate what they can do in ten.
Thatāll preach, wonāt it?
Because if youāve ever tried to change anythingāyour health, your habits, your family rhythms, your churchāyou know how tempting it is to want results⦠now. We want the instant glow-up. The viral moment. The magic Sunday, where everything clicks and the seats are full and the communion supplies run low.
But real growthālasting, godly, deep-down fruitādoesnāt come in a rush.
It comes through a slow and steady obedience. Through faithfulness in obscurity. Through loving people, one visit, one meal, one prayer at a time.
At Bethany Church, weāve been learning this in real time.
When I first stepped into this little congregation of 11 people, I didnāt know what to think. Over several months, God placed a burden in my heart to see this and other small churches not just stay open, but become healthy⦠To move from surviving to thriving. But I forgot that it is a long journey. But through it all, the one constant has been this: God moves at the pace of real relationship.
Heās not interested in building something flashy. Heās interested in forming something faithful.
And that takes time.
Sometimes it feels like nothing is happening.
Like weāre just spinning wheels or repeating routines.
But then, out of nowhere, a new family walks through the door.
A kid brings their friend to VBS.
A longtime attender raises their hand to serve.
A skeptical neighbor shows up just to ācheck it out.ā
And you realizeāGod has been working all along. Just mostly underground.
Thatās what Habakkuk needed to hear.
He was crying out to God, trying to make sense of the mess around him.
And Godās response wasnāt, āHereās a fix.ā
It was, āHereās a vision. Write it down. Keep it close. Because itās coming.ā
āIf it seems slow, wait for it. It will surely come.ā
I donāt know what vision God has put in your heart.
Maybe itās healing in your marriage.
Maybe itās seeing your child return to faith.
Maybe itās reaching people in your town who seem completely disinterested in Jesus.
Whatever it isāif itās Godās visionāitās not wasted. Even when it feels like itās taking forever.
Even when youāre tired.
Even when youāre not sure anyone notices or cares.
Let me tell you something I need to remind myself of regularly:
Just because somethingās slow doesnāt mean itās dead.
Think of all the places in Scripture where God shows up late by human standards⦠and right on time in His divine plan.
Lazarus was four days in the grave.
The Israelites wandered for forty years.
David waited decades to wear the crown he was anointed for as a boy.
Even Jesus waited thirty years to begin His public ministryāand Heās the Son of God!
So if youāre feeling behind⦠if it seems like the dream is crawling forward while the world is sprinting pastā¦
Hang in there.
Write the vision.
Make it plain.
Run with it.
And wait for the Lordās appointed time.
Because He hasnāt forgotten.
He hasnāt misplaced the blueprint.
And Heās never, ever in a hurry.
Here on the porch, weāre learning to live by the rhythms of faithfulness.
We donāt chase hype.
We donāt measure worth by speed.
We trust the slow grace of God to do what only He can.
This is the long game. And itās worth playing.
Grace & Peaceā
Adam
š£ Quick Reminder
Thank you to everyone whoās shared and subscribed this past week. We launched paid subscriptions for The Pastorās Porch last Monday, and Iām really encouraged by your kindness and support.
If you missed that post, hereās the link with all the details and why I believe this little corner of the internet can serve both weary sheep and rural shepherds:
š Click here to read āLet's Build Something That Lasts" and explore paid tiers
Paid subscribers get access to bonus posts, behind-the-scenes reflections, and early access to devotional content in the works.
But donāt worryāthe weekly Monday post remains completely free for everyone. Iām grateful youāre here.
šŖ Porchside Update:
Itās been two weeks since my father died. I think weāre doing okay. Dad was, like many of us, a complicated man, and so were most of his relationships. In some ways, we were close, and in other ways, Dad wasnāt ācloseā with anyone. I find myself thinking of calling him periodically when I come across someone he taught in school or a story that I think heād find funny. I guess those of you who have been down this road can relate all too well to that.
In happier news, Christina and I celebrated 16 years of marriage on Friday! She surprised me with a night away and no kids. First time weāve been on a kid-free excursion in a long time. It was nice. And we bought each other new Bibles. I mean, after all, weāre a ministry couple. What could be more exciting? š