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Friday, April 24, 2026

Daily Devotions for Friday, April 24, 2026: Deep Roots in the Waiting

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The Daily Devotional

Friday, April 24, 2026

Deep Roots in the Waiting

“But if we hope for what we do not see, we wait for it with patience.” — Romans 8:25

Reflection

Romans 8 was written into a world that knew hardship firsthand. Paul was not speaking to people living in ease or certainty. He was writing to believers who understood suffering, delay, and the ache of unanswered questions. In that setting, his words carry unusual tenderness and strength: “If we hope for what we do not see, we wait for it with patience.” This is not a call to resignation. It is an invitation to a deeper way of living—a way that refuses to let urgency rule the soul.

We live in a world that trains us to want everything now. We can receive news instantly, send messages instantly, buy instantly, react instantly, and often expect spiritual clarity instantly as well. We may not say it out loud, but many of us quietly assume that if God is at work, the answer should come quickly. Relief should be swift. Direction should be obvious. Healing should arrive on our timeline. Yet Paul points us toward a different rhythm, one shaped not by instant gratification but by patient endurance. Christian patience is not empty waiting. It is active trust. It is the steady confidence that God is present and faithful even when the outcome is still hidden from view.

That kind of patience is not usually formed in comfort. It grows in the long middle places of life—in prayers that seem to hang in the air, in seasons when reconciliation has not yet come, in the slow work of healing, in the uncertainty of major decisions, and in burdens we would never have chosen for ourselves. Waiting exposes what we lean on. It reveals how often we want control more than trust. But it can also become holy ground, because in waiting, God often deepens what quick answers never could.

Years ago, a farmer in the Southwest planted a small orchard at the edge of the desert. The land was harsh, the soil thin, and the conditions seemed all wrong for such tender beginnings. Neighbors told him he was wasting his time and water. From the outside, it may have looked that way. The saplings struggled. Growth appeared slow. There were no immediate signs of abundance. But the farmer believed in the process. He kept watering, pruning, and tending what looked unimpressive to everyone else. He did not measure success by speed. He trusted that roots were reaching deeper than the eye could see. Years passed before the orchard bore fruit, but when it did, the fruit was plentiful and sweet—shaped by endurance, strengthened by adversity, and nourished by roots that had learned to go deep.

That image speaks so clearly to the life of faith. Much of what God is doing in us happens beneath the surface long before it appears in visible ways. We often want fruit without waiting for roots. We want maturity without process, peace without surrender, and hope without delay. But the Spirit’s work is rarely rushed. Patience is one of the fruits the Spirit grows not in hurried ease but in the difficult soil of trust. It forms when we continue praying after disappointment, continue loving after hurt, continue obeying when the next step is unclear, and continue hoping when we cannot yet see what God is preparing.

This is why patience is not weakness. It is quiet strength. It is the strength to remain openhearted without becoming bitter. It is the strength to keep believing without demanding immediate proof. It is the strength to rest in God’s promises when circumstances have not yet caught up. A seed buried in darkness can look forgotten, but hiddenness is not abandonment. Beneath the soil, something sacred is taking place. In much the same way, there are seasons when our lives seem still, unanswered, or obscured, yet God is at work in ways we cannot yet measure.

So when you find yourself anxious or discouraged in a season of waiting, do not assume that nothing is happening. Whether you are waiting for healing, reconciliation, direction, provision, or deliverance, the invitation is not merely to endure the delay, but to meet God within it. Ask the Holy Spirit to strengthen the fruit of patience in you. Instead of asking only, “How much longer?” try also asking, “Lord, how are You making me more faithful here?” That shift matters. It turns waiting from wasted time into formed time. It reminds us that every slow day can deepen our roots in Christ.

There is grace in learning to wait well. Not perfectly, not without tears, and not without honest prayer, but faithfully. We are allowed to bring God our longing. We are allowed to say that the waiting is hard. But we are also called to remember that the One who holds time is trustworthy. God is never hurried, never delayed, never distracted, and never absent. His work is often quieter than we expect, but it is never careless. What He grows slowly, He often grows deeply.

Today, if your life feels caught in an unfinished chapter, take heart. The orchard may still look small. The fruit may not yet be visible. But roots are growing. God is not wasting this season. In the waiting, He is forming endurance. In the silence, He is nurturing trust. In the unseen places, He is preparing fruit that will come in due season. Hope and patience do walk hand in hand, because both are anchored not in what we can see, but in the faithfulness of the God who has promised to bring His good work to completion.

Prayer

Lord, You are never early and never late. Teach us to wait well—to trust You in the quiet, to hope when we cannot see, and to rest in Your promises when the road feels long. Strengthen within us the fruit of patience, that we may not grow bitter or weary, but deeper, steadier, and more faithful. In seasons of waiting for healing, reconciliation, direction, or deliverance, keep our hearts anchored in Your love. Help us to trust Your unseen work and to believe that Your timing is perfect. Form in us a quiet strength that reflects Your heart, and let our lives bear sweet fruit in due season. Amen.


Devotional by: Kenny Sallee, ThM — Deming, NM, USA

The Bible texts are from the New Revised Standard Version (NRSV) Bible, copyright © 1989, 1993, the Division of Christian Education of the National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America. Used by permission. All rights reserved.