There are seasons in life that feel tighter than others.

Some stretches of the journey feel wide open. There is margin. There is momentum. There is strength. But then there are other stretches where pressure rises, options narrow, and even small decisions feel weighty.

That is true in life, and it is true in our walk with God.

In Navigating the Difficult Stretch, Scott Sistrunk brings a timely and pastoral word from Hebrews 12:1-2, reminding us that faith is not lived on a perfectly smooth road. There are moments in the race when the path gets narrow, the pressure gets real, and the only way forward is to keep looking unto Jesus.

For families in Garland, TX, and surrounding communities like Murphy, Plano, Richardson, Rowlett, and Wylie, this message is a needed reminder: the difficult stretch is not the end of your story. God is with you in it, and He will bring you through it.


The Christian Life Includes Difficult Stretches

Hebrews 12 opens with the image of a race:

“Let us run with patience the race that is set before us, looking unto Jesus the author and finisher of our faith…” — Hebrews 12:1-2

That passage is honest about something many believers eventually discover: following Jesus does not mean avoiding difficulty. It means learning how to endure with faith when the course gets hard.

Scott Sistrunk painted that reality with a clear image. In golf, there is a famous section of Augusta National called Amen Corner—a stretch where pressure rises, mistakes multiply, and championships can be won or lost. Spiritually, every believer faces a version of that. There are seasons where the pressure is heavier, the margin is thinner, and the challenge is sharper than usual.

Faith Is Not Lived on Easy Street

The Bible never pretends the journey is effortless.

It speaks of:

  • wilderness seasons
  • storms at sea
  • nights of waiting
  • places of testing
  • moments where endurance matters more than emotion

That matters, because many people assume something is wrong when life gets hard. But often, difficulty is not proof that God has left you. Sometimes it is proof that God is still shaping you.

The difficult stretch is not evidence of abandonment. It is often evidence of formation.


You Are Not Running Alone

One of the great encouragements of Hebrews 12 is that we are “compassed about with so great a cloud of witnesses.”

That means there are faithful men and women who have already run their race, already endured hardship, already faced impossible moments, and already finished well.

Others Have Made It Through Before You

Noah endured.
Abraham endured.
Moses endured.
David endured.
The prophets endured.
The early church endured.

And because they endured, they now witness to us that God is faithful.

You are not the first person to face a tight place in your marriage, your finances, your ministry, your mind, or your health. Others have walked through valleys, carried burdens, cried real tears, and still found God sufficient.

That matters for believers across Dallas County, Collin County, and Rockwall County. Whether you are in a difficult family season, a long-standing prayer battle, or a private struggle no one else sees, you are not isolated in your suffering.

The people of God have always had to learn how to keep running.


Lay Aside What Will Weigh You Down

Hebrews 12 says to lay aside every weight and the sin which so easily besets us.

That is such an important word because in difficult stretches, what you carry matters more than ever.

Not Everything Is Sin, But Some Things Still Slow You Down

Scott Sistrunk made this plain: some things may not be sin in themselves, but they become dangerous in tight spaces.

Unmanaged fear.
Unchecked attitudes.
Spiritual fatigue.
Distractions we refuse to release.
Habits that weaken attention and dull faith.

In wide-open spaces, people sometimes get careless. But in a narrow stretch, carelessness becomes costly.

That is why difficult seasons require renewed focus. This is not the time to drift spiritually. This is not the time to loosen your grip on prayer, the Word, or the house of God. This is the time to simplify, refocus, and let go of what keeps you from running well.

Grace Empowers You to Let It Go

Grace is not permission to carry unnecessary weight forever. Grace is God’s power to help you lay it down before it wrecks you.

Sometimes change begins with a simple decision:

  • put down the distraction
  • stop feeding the wrong thought
  • turn off the noise
  • get both hands back on the wheel
  • re-center your life on Jesus

That is not legalism. That is wisdom.


Looking Unto Jesus Is the Key

The central command of Hebrews 12 is not just to run. It is to run while looking unto Jesus.

That is the difference-maker.

You Will Not Survive the Stretch by Watching the Storm

Peter began walking on the water in faith, but when he took his eyes off Jesus and focused on the wind and waves, he began to sink.

That still happens today.

When believers focus more on:

  • the pressure
  • the problem
  • the fear
  • the delay
  • the “what if”
    than they do on Jesus, faith begins to erode.

The answer is not pretending everything is fine. The answer is fixing your attention on the One who is still Lord in the middle of the storm.

Do the Basic Things Faithfully

When the stretch gets hard, the solution is not flashy spirituality. It is faithful consistency.

Read your Bible.
Pray anyway.
Come to church anyway.
Worship even if you do not feel it.
Give thanks even when emotions lag behind.
Keep your eyes on Jesus.

That is how believers in Garland, Plano, Richardson, Rowlett, Murphy, and Wylie keep moving forward when the road gets narrow. You do not need a dramatic new strategy. You need durable faithfulness.


Jesus Himself Endured the Difficult Stretch

Hebrews 12 points us to Jesus, who for the joy set before Him endured the cross, despising the shame.

Jesus knows what it means to walk through the hardest stretch.

The Cross Was Not the End

Jesus prayed in Gethsemane. He felt the weight. He endured betrayal, suffering, shame, and agony. But He kept going because He could see beyond the pain to the joy that was set before Him.

That means our Savior does not just sympathize with difficulty—He overcame it.

And because He overcame, His people can endure too.

Your Trial Has an End Date

One of the strongest threads in this message is this: your difficult stretch is real, but it is not permanent.

Weeping may endure for a night, but joy comes in the morning.

That does not mean every answer comes overnight. It means darkness is not forever. There is an end to the wilderness. There is an end to the testing. There is an end to the night.

God knows exactly how long the stretch is.
He knows what it is producing in you.
And He knows how to bring you out.


You Were Built for This Season

Scott Sistrunk did not preach panic. He preached perspective.

You were not sent into this stretch without grace.

God Gives Strength for What He Allows

If God has allowed you to walk through this season, He also intends to sustain you in it.

Isaiah said:

“He giveth power to the faint; and to them that have no might he increaseth strength.”

That promise still stands.

You may feel tired.
You may feel stretched.
You may feel uncertain.

But you are not forsaken. God has already accounted for the pressure, and His grace is sufficient.

The Tight Place Is Forming You

Deuteronomy reminds us that God led Israel through the wilderness on purpose. It was not accidental. It was formative.

The same is true for us.

There are lessons learned in the tight stretch that cannot be learned anywhere else:

  • trust
  • endurance
  • humility
  • discipline
  • dependence
  • patience

Some of the strongest believers are not the ones who avoided hardship. They are the ones who kept walking with God through it.


Do Not Quit in the Middle of the Course

This message carries an urgent but hopeful call: do not quit in the middle of the stretch.

Keep Going

You do not have to be spectacular right now.
You do not have to perform.
You do not have to manufacture emotion.

You just have to keep moving.

Keep believing.
Keep obeying.
Keep showing up.
Keep trusting.
Keep thanking God.
Keep running with patience.

There are moments when the greatest victory is not dramatic—it is simply refusing to stop.


God Will Bring You Into a Wealthy Place

The Psalms declare:

“We went through fire and through water: but thou broughtest us out into a wealthy place.”

That is the promise on the other side of endurance.

Not that God wastes your pain.
Not that the struggle was meaningless.
But that He brings His people through.

For some, that wealthy place will look like healing.
For others, it will look like peace.
For others, clarity.
For others, restoration.
For others, endurance they did not know they could have.

But the promise is the same: God does not leave His children in the stretch forever.


Navigating the Difficult Stretch Starts Here

If you are walking through a difficult season today, do not interpret it as failure.

This is not the end.
This is not the collapse of your faith.
This is not proof that God has forgotten you.

This is a stretch of the course.

And the same God who set the course before you will give grace to finish it.

So do what Hebrews 12 tells you to do:

Lay aside the weight.
Lay aside the sin.
Look unto Jesus.
Run with patience.
And keep going.

Because by the grace of God, you are going to make it through.

Join us for a worship service on Sunday at 9:00 or 11:00 AM and Wednesday at 7:30 PM. Learn more about service times, locations, and language options by clicking here. You may also watch LIVE by clicking here.