When tired isn’t the same as called.
After being with your local church for years, have you ever sat there at times and felt unsettled, not because on surface level anything is wrong, but because you just felt weary or tired? John 15 brings a great nudge for that weariness. You may know it well, it’s the one about Jesus being the vine, the true vine, and we are the branches. That’s not always how we feel, but the challenge goes further (flick to your Bible app in a few moments and check it out). Jesus doesn’t say go off and find the perfect vineyard, a church with better Wi-Fi, more comfortable chairs, better coffee and great socials.
The challenge is greater. He says abide in me. Stay with me. Let your roots go deep. Fruit grows from remaining, not drifting from place to place in search of ideal conditions. It’s finding Him where you are and remaining, abiding. Remain is one of the first words you learn when studying Koine Greek. The word for faith and believe are both one in Greek, the same for remain and abide.
The fruit of the Spirit doesn’t appear because a church suits your taste. It grows when the Spirit shapes your character through ordinary faithfulness. In a world of transformation, supernatural, spiritual realm, ordinary can seem so… ordinary.
And then there’s patience. No one can make you patient. No one can force faithfulness into you. That’s the daily work of yielding to the Spirit. Growth happens when you stay long enough for Him to confront the parts of you that prefer ease over endurance. Many believers want maturity without pressure, yet Scripture shows that fruit develops through consistent walking with Christ, not through uprooting yourself whenever frustration hits.
And we have to be honest. Sometimes the heaviness you feel isn’t a sign of bad soil. It’s simple exhaustion. Elijah dismantled emotionally under the tree, not because he was in the wrong place, but because he was running on empty and discouragement. The remedy? God fed him and let him sleep. Some people misread tiredness as spiritual misalignment. They call fatigue a sign to move on when the Spirit is actually calling them to rest and recover. Pulling your socks up and getting on with it is what you do only when peace, rest, pizza and encouragement have done their empowering work.
Here’s something else that probably needs saying. It’s possible to stay in a church and still drift from Christ. Staying physically doesn’t mean abiding spiritually. Habit can replace devotion. Quiet resentment can grow under the surface while you smile your way through Sundays. Unprocessed disappointment becomes bitterness if it isn’t surrendered to the Spirit. People call this loyalty, but it’s really stagnation wrapped in routine as one struggles to stay above the waterline, bobbing up and down, gasping for breath. Abiding isn’t attendance. It’s engagement. It’s a heart that keeps returning to Christ rather than going numb in the same seat week after week. I have the T-shirt.
This is where intentional staying matters. The signs are obvious. Staying isn’t passive. It’s active obedience. It’s showing up with a teachable spirit. It’s choosing service when your feelings are flat. It’s remaining open to Scripture when your emotions are dull. Healthy staying carries the fruit of the Spirit’s evidence of perseverance. Peace that returns in the quiet moments like the dove sent out from the ark. Joy that comes from loving people. A willingness to let God’s people speak into your life. A readiness to repent when pride creeps in. Be encouraged. If those signs are present, you’re abiding, not just enduring.
Sometimes the life you’re longing for is found in strengthening the weary person next to you. Encouraging others has a way of waking up colour, vibrance and umph in your own soul. When you lift up someone who can barely hold their head up, vitality returns to you like a flood. When you get involved in real lives, the church stops feeling dull and starts feeling vibrantly alive. The Spirit often renews us through the very people we think we’re there to help.
I’ve lived long-term commitment. I stayed in my previous church for twenty-seven years. That kind of duration shapes you. You see children grow into adults. You watch fragile marriages turn into testimonies of grace. You encourage people through grief and stand with them in joy. When the Spirit finally told me it was time to move on, it was a wrench, because you don’t leave a lifetime lightly. That’s why I’ll always encourage people to give it some welly. Put roots down. Overlook the small things that wind you up and see the treasure that sits right in front of you. God’s people. Their stories. Their struggles. Their victories. You can only see the slow miracles if you stay long enough.
Staying doesn’t mean ignoring genuine problems though. There are rare moments when the soil truly stops feeding you no matter how much Miracle-Gro you pour on it. There may be a time when Scripture feels diluted and when grace is thin. It comes when it seems that control takes the place of freedom and the Spirit’s presence is pushed to the edges. In those seasons, the Lord won’t keep you guessing. He leads with clarity, not confusion and those moments, when they come are far less common than we imagine, most of the time the real battle is happening inside us, not around us.
The encouragement from this serial long-term church attendee is that before you decide you’re planted in the wrong place, slow down, breathe and talk to others. Ask the Spirit to examine your heart. Are you truly starving, or simply tired and hungry? Are you abiding or drifting? Are you being shaped or resisting? John 15 tells us fruit comes from remaining, staying long enough for the vinedresser to finish what He started. If He calls you elsewhere, He’ll make it clear. Until then, sink your roots deep and let Him grow something in you that only time, faithfulness and grace can produce.
~ Jon