In 2006, Trevor Thompson surveyed 1,003 adults and determined the following: While waiting in line at an office or store, most people take an average of 17 minutes to lose their cool. When placed on hold during a phone call, most people lose their patience in 9 minutes. Women lose their patience after waiting in line for about 18 minutes. Men lose it after 15 minutes. People with a college education and a higher income lose their patience quicker than those with lower income less and education.

Though the believers of his day may have been facing mistreatment by the rich (or perhaps envied their riches), James exhorted them not to lose their patience (James 5:1-7). They were no doubt fatigued and weary from the trials they endured, but he told them to take courage and to be patient (James 5:7). This kind of patience would be developed only in the crucible of discomfort, pain, and suffering. They were called to live in hope until Jesus returned and eradicated injustice in the world.

To help them understand what he was asking them to do, James used an agricultural illustration. The farmer was dependent on God and waited for Him to send the rains, so he could grow and harvest precious fruit. Therefore, these believers, like Job, needed to wait and trust God to address the mystery of their suffering. James wrote, “We give great honor to those who endure under suffering” (James 5:11).

We are also called to be patient. As we read God’s Word, dwell in His love, intentionally slow down, and live from an eternal perspective (Romans 15:4; 2 Thessalonians 3:5; Hebrews 10:34-37), we can develop growth in this virtue. And we can learn to respond more and more like Jesus (1 Peter 2:23).

NLT 365-day reading plan passage for today: 1 Samuel 8:6-22