Podcast Episode 02: Faithfulness in the Garden: Slow Living With GOD

Pip: Pollywog’s Place Blog is the kind of corner of the internet that asks you to slow down — and then actually makes a case for why that’s worth doing.

Mara: Today’s episode comes from Susie at Pollywog’s Place Blog, and it’s rooted in one idea: what a garden teaches about faithfulness, patience, and trusting a process you can’t always see. Let’s start with the garden itself.

Faithfulness in the Garden: Slow Living With GOD

Mara: The post opens with a simple premise — that tending a garden, done slowly and with attention, becomes a spiritual practice. The question it keeps returning to is: what does faithfulness actually look like when nothing visible is happening yet?

Pip: And the anchor for that question comes early in the piece, framed around the quality of faithful work that goes unobserved: “faithfulness can look: Quiet. Unnoticed. Consistent.”

Mara: That’s the spine of the whole reflection. Faithfulness isn’t defined here by results or recognition — it’s defined by showing up anyway. The post draws a direct line between what a gardener does before anything blooms and what a person of faith does before any prayer is visibly answered.

Pip: The gardening metaphor does real work here. Soil preparation, planting, waiting — each stage maps onto something in a faith life, and the waiting stage gets the most attention. There’s a line that captures it plainly: “growth often begins where our eyes cannot see.”

Mara: The post backs that up with Galatians 6:9 — “let us not be weary in well doing: for in due season we shall reap, if we faint not.” The “due season” framing recurs throughout. Harvest isn’t withheld; it’s timed.

Pip: There’s also a harder turn in the piece — the weeds section. Worry, fear, bitterness, discouragement. The post names them plainly and says faithfulness sometimes means letting those things be removed, even when it’s uncomfortable.

Mara: That’s where the reflection gets practical rather than just encouraging. It’s not only about patient waiting; it’s about what you allow to compete for space while you wait. The post closes on a direct address to anyone in a season of planting, tending, or waiting — the Gardener, it says, has not left the garden.

Pip: Which is a quiet way of saying the process isn’t abandoned just because it’s invisible — and that’s a harder thing to hold onto than it sounds.

Mara: Exactly the kind of slow-living conviction the whole post is built around.


Pip: Faithfulness as a daily, unspectacular practice — it’s a countercultural idea dressed in garden soil.

Mara: And one worth sitting with. More from Pollywog’s Place next time.

You can read the post HERE:

Faithfulness in the Garden: Slow Living With GOD

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