Digging Deeper: Don’t Waste the Waiting
Curt Bowen
on
January 2, 2026

And Jesus increased in wisdom and in stature and in favor with God and man.
Luke 2:52 (ESV)
DON’T WASTE THE WAITING
The light peeked in through the window screens, and I barely moved. I could feel every inch of the OSB board just below the thin mattress. It gave an unyielding pressure, sending a dull throb crawling up my back. I shifted, then shifted again, but there was no position where the ache didn’t bloom and spread. It didn’t matter that the bell was ringing—I both wanted to lie in that bed longer and not be in it at the same time.
Then I heard a deep voice beside me. A hand rested on my shoulder as I lay on my side. But the voice wasn’t a counselor’s. It was familiar.
“Hey, Dad. It’s time. Morning Watch is about to start.”
I sat up, but not fully. I exited diagonally, my sandy feet hitting the floor. With bits of grit clinging to my skin, my adult brain finally understood the importance of the nightly broom sweepings.
As we walked down the dirt hill, I overheard two boys—both far younger than my sons—talking to each other.
“I heard there’s a giant turtle that lives at the bottom of the lake.”
“The lower one?”
“No, the upper one with the dock. And it once ate a kid’s toe.”
I almost blurted out, finger—almost. But I stayed silent.
The chaplain was Matt, and he nearly collided with my oldest son as we approached the makeshift amphitheater by the lake.
“Tripp, you have those forms turned in?”
Tripp shook his head no.
Matt smiled. Crow’s-feet lined the corners of his eyes—the kind I tend to notice on people who have been walking with the Lord for a long time.
“You’ll be good with the kids.”
Matt moved to the center as we settled into our seats. The roar of Morning Watch dropped an octave, layered with the weight of grown voices—fathers seated shoulder to shoulder with their sons on the benches, all facing forward. Matt said nothing at first, letting the silence stretch. His gaze drifted upward, breath slow and deliberate, as though he were counting the trees one by one.
“This place… is special, for God is here.”
There are two theories of time. One is like a book, where the past is as real as the present and the future—kind of like how a book has all its pages coexisting at the same time. The other is that only the present exists. The past is truly gone; the future is merely potential. I’m inclined to think the latter is true. If so, the stories I’ve shared here—those moments, the way the trees leaned, the way the campers and counselors looked, and even some of the people themselves—all of that is gone. All that is left are memories.
In one sense, the moments—from searching for Cary to attending father-son weekend at the same camp—seemed to stretch on forever. In another, they passed in the blink of an eye. 2026 is out there, waiting—full of potential for you to build God’s kingdom: to witness, to encourage, to serve. Don’t waste it. I once heard Tim Tebow say something along the lines of, “I don’t want to enter heaven well rested.”
Remember what we’ve learned this week. Jesus truly grew—in wisdom, stature, and favor. He is worthy of worship, receiving what belongs to God alone. Love for God is shown through obedience, by aligning our will with His. God’s commands are not burdensome, but flow from perfect love and wisdom. And because our time is brief, don’t waste the waiting—seek Jesus, worship Him, and pour your life out on what lasts.

Curt Bowen is a husband, father, and group leader who loves engaging in apologetics, theology, and good BBQ. A thrill-seeker at heart, he enjoys roller coasters and has an appreciation for snakes—just not the conversational type.

