CHUCK HILL TODAY
SEASONS OF LIFE

SEASONS OF LIFE

Seasons of Life

Ecclesiastes 3:1–15

Good morning everyone. I’m so glad to see all of you here today. As we begin this morning, I want to share with you some powerful words of wisdom from Solomon, the great King of Israel. In the book of Ecclesiastes, he writes:

I am grateful that we serve a God who reigns over the seasons of our lives.

This truth is woven into creation itself. God established the four seasons through the rotation of the earth as it orbits the sun. As the earth moves, the seasons change. Yet the sun remains constant. It does not shift. It does not waver. It does not adjust to the earth. And yet everything on this planet depends upon its steady presence and power.

In much the same way, our lives were designed to revolve around the Son, Jesus Christ.

And here is the good news: though we will face change, though our lives will move in and out of seasons, the Son remains the same yesterday, today, and forever. His constancy anchors us when everything else feels unsettled.

Change happens constantly. Nothing remains the same.

Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist George Will once observed,

“The future has a way of arriving unannounced.”

An ancient Greek philosopher named Heraclitus once said,

“You cannot step twice into the same river, for other waters are continually flowing.”

That captures life well. Circumstances shift. Opportunities change. Seasons move forward whether we are ready or not. And as Solomon reminds us, in the economy of God, there is a time and a season for everything.

A Time to Tear Down and a Time to Build

I recently ran across a book by historian Bruce Kuklick. Some of you baseball fans may appreciate this.

A time to tear down.
A time to build up.

It seems Solomon was right. In the economy of God, there is a season for both.

While there may be a season to play baseball, there is also a season to advance the ministry of the church. Everything unfolds in its God appointed time.

The Wisdom of Ecclesiastes

If you know anything about Ecclesiastes, you know it contains some striking observations about life. Much of it sounds sober. Some of it feels unsettling. Solomon wrestles with the futility of life lived without eternal perspective. He critiques the secularization of his culture, something I think we can certainly identify with today. Yet in the middle of this book (this book that sometimes feels emotionally overwhelming), hope breaks through. This happens in Chapter 3.

Chapter 3 begins not with despair, but with poetry.

This passage is not cynical. It is deeply theological.

Notice Solomon does not say everything happens “under the sun,” a phrase he often uses elsewhere. Here he says everything happens “under heaven.”

That distinction matters. Because, he’s reminding us that every season, every time, every purpose unfolds beneath the authority of the God of heaven!

Later, in Ecclesiastes 5:2, he writes,

Everything that happens in this time bound universe happens under the rule of the God who reigns in heaven.

God governs the minutes and the moments. He rules the years and the eras. Nothing in time escapes His authority.

Chronos and Kairos

In the Greek translation of the Old Testament, two words are used for time, chronos and kairos.

  • Chronos refers to measurable time. Minutes. Hours. Days. The ticking of the clock.
  • Kairos refers to time in another way. Not so much a measurement of duration, but rather one of opportunity. Not just passing time, but appointed time.

And that’s the word that Solomon uses here. He’s telling us that every season carries divine purpose. There is a divinely appointed opportunity for every matter under heaven.

Even when life feels unstable, God has not lost control of the calendar.

So, How Do We Face the Seasons of Life?

Well, let me leave you with three guiding truths.

  1. Trust in God’s Sovereignty

When we speak of God’s sovereignty, we are speaking of His supreme authority. Nothing lies outside His rule. He is not merely influential in history. He governs it.

Psalm 103 reminds us,

Not some things. Not most things. All.

Isaiah strengthens it further:

God does not discover the future. He declares it.

Consider Job.

Some mistakenly read Job’s story as though God were powerless against Satan. But Scripture makes it clear that Satan had to ask permission. He could not act without divine allowance. Nothing happened outside God’s awareness or authority.

That does not make suffering easy. It does not remove mystery. But it does remove randomness.

Paul affirms this same confidence:

“All things” includes the seasons we celebrate and the seasons we endure.

The Westminster Catechism summarizes it well:

“His holy, wise and powerful providence governs all His creatures, and all their actions.”

Nothing surprises God. Nothing catches heaven off guard. Even in your most confusing season, God remains sovereign.

His sovereignty does not eliminate pain, but it anchors purpose.

2. Wait on God’s Timing

If God rules over time, then His timing can be trusted.

David understood this deeply. Anointed king while still a shepherd boy, he waited years before sitting on the throne. Between promise and fulfillment came giants, caves, betrayal, warfare, and long seasons of transition. Yet in the middle of his uncertainty, David wrote:

He placed his seasons in God’s hand.

Waiting on God’s timing is not passive resignation. It is active trust. It is confidence that the One who governs time also governs fulfillment.

Psalm 27 reinforces this:

Isaiah gives us the promise attached to waiting:

And in the New Testament we are reminded that even the coming of Christ happened according to divine timing:

God is never rushed. He is never delayed. He moves in fullness.

There are seasons between what was and what will be. Transition can feel long and uncertain. But waiting on God’s timing shapes patience, deepens faith, and renews strength.

One of the elderly ladies within our ministries (years ago), used to be fond of saying: “God is rarely early, He’s never late, He’s always right on time!”

3. Make Good Use of the Season You Have Been Given

What I’m saying is — don’t waste your season. Your time is your most precious and most valuable commodity in life. So, steward it well. With every other commodity, you use it up — you can earn more. But not so with time. Once it’s gone — it’s gone! So don’t waste it. Steward it. Invest it. Use it wisely for the grand purposes of honoring and glorifying God.

Do not waste your season. Your time is your most precious stewardship. Pastor Stephen Olford called it “a fragment of eternity given by God to man as a solemn stewardship.”

If that’s true, and I believe it is, then we have a responsibility to steward it well. Scripture reinforces this responsibility again and again. As Paul writes:

To “redeem the time” means to seize the opportunity. It means to recognize that every season carries divine purpose.

James reminds us of life’s brevity:

Time is short. Seasons pass. Eternity remains.

Solomon himself says in our text:

God has placed eternity within us, yet entrusted us with time to live faithfully now.

There is a time to plant. A time to build. A time to speak. A time to act. There is also a time to release. A time to let go. A time to be silent. A time to end what has run its course. So, discern your season. Honor God in it.

Paul closes 1 Corinthians with this exhortation:

That means your present season matters.

When God leads, seize the opportunity He provides. And remember this: one day Christ will return.

Hebrews tells us:

And that appearance will not be accidental. It will be at the appointed time determined by the Father.

Until then, every season matters.

Let me offer you a final application:

Consider the season you are in right now.

  • Is it a season of beginning or ending?
  • Growth or pruning?
  • Celebration or endurance?

Instead of resisting your season, ask what God is shaping in you through it.

Instead of fearing change, anchor your life more deeply to the unchanging Christ.

Instead of clinging to what is closing, prepare your heart for what God may be opening.

And as you do, trust God’s sovereignty.
Rest in His timing. And…
Redeem the opportunity His given you.

Because to everything there is a season, and every season unfolds under heaven.

Closing Prayer