In Due Season: How to Trust God’s Perfect Timing

Have you ever tried to do the right thing for a long time and quietly wondered, Is any of this making a difference? Maybe you have kept praying, kept serving, kept forgiving, or kept showing up with a faithful heart, and still nothing seems to be moving. Waiting like that can be deeply discouraging. It can make even the strongest person feel tired. That is what makes the phrase in due season so comforting. In Galatians 6:9, Paul reminds us that God sees every seed we plant in faith, and He promises a harvest at the right time. In other words, don’t give up in the middle of the process. God is still at work, even when you cannot yet see the fruit.

What Does “In Due Season” Mean?

So what does in due season actually mean? Put simply, it means at the right time—God’s time. Not immediately, and not always on the schedule we would choose. It means there is a proper time for the seed to grow and the harvest to come. Just as a farmer plants, waters, and waits, we are called to keep doing what is right and trust that God sees every effort. The waiting season may feel long, but it is not empty. Even when nothing seems to be happening, God is still working behind the scenes.

The Picture of Sowing and Reaping

The Bible often uses everyday pictures to explain deep spiritual truths, and farming is one of them. In Galatians 6:9, doing good is compared to planting seeds. Every act of kindness, every prayer, every step of obedience, and every faithful choice is a seed planted in the soil of life. And just like real seeds, those things do not grow overnight. They need time, patience, and care. In the same way, the good we do may not show visible results right away, but that does not mean it is meaningless. A harvest always takes time.

A Simple Breakdown of Galatians 6:9

“Let us not grow weary in well-doing”

This part of the verse speaks to anyone who feels worn out. Doing the right thing can be exhausting, especially when it goes unnoticed or unappreciated. Sometimes we get discouraged because the change we hoped for is slow. Sometimes it feels like our prayers are hitting the ceiling. But this verse reminds us that weariness is real, and so is the temptation to quit. God’s encouragement is simple: keep going. Keep doing good, even when your heart feels tired.

“For in due time”

These words point to God’s timing, which is often very different from ours. We live in a world that loves speed and instant results, but God is never rushed. He sees the whole picture while we can only see a small piece of it. What feels delayed to us may actually be perfectly timed in His plan. He knows when hearts are ready, when circumstances are aligned, and when the harvest will bring the greatest good.

“We will reap a harvest”

The promise here is full of hope: faithful living is never wasted. A harvest can take many forms. Sometimes it looks like growth in your own character. Sometimes it shows up as healing in a relationship, a prayer answered after a long wait, or quiet peace that only God could give. And sometimes the full reward is something only eternity will reveal. Either way, the message is clear: nothing done for God is pointless.

“If we do not give up”

This final phrase is where the challenge becomes personal. The verse does not promise an easy road; it calls us to endure. The Christian life is not a quick sprint but a long walk of trust. There will be hard days, doubts, and seasons when nothing seems to change. Still, perseverance matters. Staying faithful when life feels heavy is often part of how God prepares us for the harvest.

Psalm 145:15 and God’s Provision

Psalm 145:15 adds another beautiful layer to this idea: “The eyes of all look to you, and you give them their food in due season.” Here, the phrase points to God’s provision. All creation looks to Him as the true provider, and He gives what is needed at the right time. When you place this verse alongside Galatians 6:9, the message becomes even richer: God provides in the right season, and He also rewards faithfulness in the right season. That means we can trust Him with both our daily needs and our long-term hopes.

What This Means for Everyday Life

·       Keep doing good even when no one notices. God sees what others overlook.

·       Be patient with slow growth. Just because change is not immediate does not mean God is absent.

·       Do not judge faithfulness only by what you can see. Some of God’s most important work happens quietly.

·       Lean on God when you feel tired. Perseverance is not about pretending to be strong; it is about depending on His strength.

·       Encourage other people to keep going. The words “let us” remind us that faith was never meant to be lived alone.

A Short Personal Reflection

One of the hardest parts of faith is staying steady in a season that feels quiet. We tend to expect growth to be obvious, but many of God’s deepest works happen beneath the surface, where we cannot yet see them. There are times when obedience feels small and unnoticed, but those are often the very moments when roots are growing deeper. Later on, many people realize that God was doing far more in the waiting than they understood at the time.

Final Encouragement

So if your hands feel tired and your heart feels worn, hold on to this promise: in due season is not wishful thinking. It is a reminder that God’s timing is wise, His faithfulness is steady, and none of your obedience is ever wasted. Every prayer, every act of kindness, every quiet moment of endurance matters to Him. So stay the course. Keep doing good. Keep trusting the God who sees the full harvest long before you do. And when the right season comes, you will see that He was faithful all along.

Minister A Francine Green I May 2026

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