Skip to main content

Lessons from the Garden

                It seems that everyone I know is planting a garden this year.  Even those who have had no interest in gardening before are building raised beds and talking about which variety of tomato grows best around here. My grandparents always had a garden and as did Sara’s Dad, so I know a little bit about them.  In fact, I think that gardens can remind us of some important spiritual truths.
                For example, gardening is all about expectation and anticipation.  Those are two of my favourite words these days.  When you plant a garden, you do not plant the finished product.  Rather, you plant seeds hoping that they will become something fruitful.  Gardening is an investment of time and energy now so that you can reap the rewards later.
                The process of sowing and reaping is a constant theme in the word of God.  Paul reminded the Corinthian church that, “Whoever sows sparingly will also reap sparingly, and whoever sows generously will also reap generously” (2 Corinthians 9:6).  When we serve God and others, we are sowing seeds that will yield something good later.  It is the hope of something better down the road that changes the way we act today.
                The other thing that I have noticed about gardeners is that they are generous with what they have grown.  At church, people will often bring baskets of tomatoes, buckets of potatoes and bunches of onions and give them away because they know that they can not keep or use it all.  If they are not generous with their produce, it will rot and go to waste.
                The same principle works in spiritual things.  If you do not give away your time, it spoils into boredom.  If you do not give away your love, it spoils into selfishness.  If you do not give away your possessions, they spoil into greed.  As odd as it sounds, giving your blessings away is the best way to benefit from them.  As Jesus said, “For whoever wants to save their life will lose it, but whoever loses their life for me will save it” (Luke 9:24).
                When you think about it, gardens should teach us something spiritual.  After all, we are serving “The Master Gardener” (John 15:1).

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Dark and Light

            When you look out at the world, what do you see?             Some see nothing but trouble and pain.   They point to things like poverty, crime, problems with drugs and alcohol and marriage break-ups and say that the world is full of sadness and sorrow.   Watch the news for even a half hour and you will get the idea that the world is a dark place.             Others see nothing but good.   They appreciate generous people in their community.   They think about their friends and neighbours and smile.   They marvel at the beauty of sunrises and stars at night.   To them, the world is a bright and wonderful place.             You may be surprised that the Bible supports both of these world views.   On one hand it says things like, “Do not love the world or anything in the world. If anyone loves the world, love for the Father is not in them. For everything in the world—the lust of the flesh, the lust of the eyes, and the pride of life—comes not from the Father but from the

New Article: Five Words to Improve Your Relationships

                 In the late 1800s, it was common for railway companies to plant formal gardens beside their stations.   These gardens were filled with trees, shrubs, flowers, and fruit trees.   Sometimes they also featured a kitchen garden growing lettuce, carrots, corn, and potatoes.   Estevan’s Canadian Pacific Railway Garden was once located where Mid-City Plumbing and Heating is today.                The purpose of these gardens was to show what the land could produce.   After hours and sometimes days of riding across the featureless prairies, the railways wanted to show settlers the potential of their new home.   The gardens showed what was possible and they encouraged the settlers to transform their own land and discover its potential too.                Today’s verse acts similarly, in that it challenges us to find the potential in

Forgetting What Is Behind

                   Generalizations are helpful because they show a pattern that is normally true. However, they are also dangerous because they ignore the exceptions to the rule.                  Here is my generalization:   It is a quality of the strong to be able to forget the past and move on.   The apostle Paul summarizes this idea when he states, “One thing I do: Forgetting what is behind and straining toward what is ahead, I press on toward the goal to win the prize for which God had called me heavenward in Christ Jesus” (Philippians 3:13-14). Too often, we trip over things that are behind us.   We remember and nurse old hurts.   We rehearse mistakes that no one else recalls.   In doing so, we pull the past into the present and allow it to dictate how we feel right now.   In these cases, we would be better off “forgett