“When your faith is tested, your endurance has a chance to grow. So let it grow, for when your endurance is fully developed, you will be perfect and complete, needing nothing.” James 1:3-4 (NLT)
It's possible to grow during times of bright, fair weather—but you put down deeper roots during the dark days of life.
As a pastor, I’ve heard from countless people who said they had grown more through separation, illness, job loss, or tragedy than they would have otherwise. They recognized how God had used difficulty to draw them closer to him and mature them.
The Bible says it this way: "When your faith is tested, your endurance has a chance to grow. So let it grow, for when your endurance is fully developed, you will be perfect and complete, needing nothing" (James 1:3-4 NLT).
Let it grow! When you let God into your problems and don’t push him out, then you’ll develop endurance that will make you ready for anything—strong in character, full and complete.
Pain is the high cost of growth. The old cliché is true: There is no gain without pain. We want the quick solution and the easy fix. We want the pill or the seminar or the book that's going to change everything without involving pain. We want the product that brings maturity without the painful process. But that isn't going to happen!
Theologian J. I. Packer said, “God uses chronic pain and weakness, along with all the other inflictions, as his chisel for sculpting our lives. It deepens our dependence upon Christ for strength each day. And the weaker we feel, the harder we lean, and the harder we lean, the stronger we grow spiritually.”
The very thing that's discouraging you right now is the very thing God is using to develop you right now.
How was David able to write such beautiful and powerful psalms? Because through all the loneliness, neglect, and injustice he went through as a young shepherd and even as a king, David knew God was with him the whole time. David wrote his most beautiful words in his deepest pain.
There will be growth in the painful parts of life that you will not gain any other way. The process will not make you perfect, but it will move you toward being more like Christ. And if you’ll trust God to keep you and walk with you in your pain, he will develop endurance in you and give you his peace and rest.
In summary:
Growth comes most deeply not in easy seasons but in life’s hardest moments, when pain, loss, and trials test faith and push roots down deeper into God’s strength. James 1:3-4 reminds us that endurance develops through testing, shaping character and moving us toward completeness in Christ. While we often long for quick fixes without pain, true maturity only comes through the refining process of difficulty, where God uses challenges as tools to sculpt us and draw us closer to him. Just as David wrote his most powerful psalms out of seasons of loneliness and hardship, our deepest growth often flows from our hardest experiences. If we choose to lean on God in the midst of struggle, he will grow endurance, deepen dependence, and bring peace, shaping us into who he’s called us to be.
Bottom line:
My deepest growth and strength come through trials—when U trust God in pain, he develops endurance, character, and Christlikeness in me.
My next wisest step:
I should integrate my personal testimony of growth through challenges into my interaction with others. Draft one story from my life where God used pain to grow my endurance, then shape it into something I can share with others.
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