Is your life full, but it feels like your soul is running dry?
When life keeps moving around us, it’s easy to miss what’s happening within us.
Jesus once told a story about a seed that struggled to grow.
The seed wasn’t the problem.
The soil wasn’t ready.
That question still lingers.
What might unprepared soil look like in your life?
We don’t usually connect a full calendar with a struggling faith. Work feels necessary. Family matters. Even church can fill the schedule. None of those things are wrong. But in the constant motion, we rarely pause long enough to ask a harder question.
Could our activity be crowding out the space where faith is meant to grow?
Spiritual growth doesn’t happen on effort alone.
It needs room.
Not just doing things for God, but being with Him.
Not just movement, but margin.
Faith, like a living thing, cannot grow where there is no space to breathe.
The Parable of the Sower
Mark 4:1–20
Jesus described four types of soil.
Not four different seeds.
Four conditions of the heart.
The hard path.
The word is heard, but quickly taken away.
Pride. Bitterness. Closed doors formed by real wounds.
Sometimes faith never has a chance because the ground has been trampled for too long.
The rocky places.
The word is received quickly and joyfully, but it has no depth.
When hardship comes, faith collapses under its weight.
What begins in excitement fades when it meets resistance.
The thorny soil.
The word takes hold, but slowly gets crowded out.
Worry. Comfort. Wanting more.
This is not rejection. It is distraction.
God is not opposed, but He is no longer central.
The good soil.
The word is received and allowed to settle.
Roots form. Growth happens. Fruit comes in time.
This soil is not flawless. It is simply open and willing.
Jesus did not tell this story to categorize people.
He told it to confront the listener.
What kind of soil am I right now?
One Thing Is Needed
Luke 10:38–42
In a quiet moment inside a busy home, Jesus sits with two sisters.
Martha works to prepare the house. Mary sits at His feet and listens.
Martha is doing good things. Necessary things.
But she is anxious and distracted by all of it.
Eventually she asks Jesus to step in and correct the imbalance.
Jesus does not scold her.
He simply names what is happening.
“You are worried and upset about many things, but only one thing is needed.”
Mary chose space over noise. Presence over productivity.
She was ready to receive.
The point was not that serving is wrong.
It was that closeness comes before activity.
Before all the things we rush to “do”.
Make Room
You cannot grow what you will not make room for.
You cannot hear God when your life never slows down long enough to listen.
Clearing space is not dramatic.
It is often quiet and uncomfortable.
But it is where roots take hold.
Clear the clutter.
Make room.
Invite God to grow something lasting in you.


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