Wednesday, July 14, 2010

Conquering the Weeds

Yesterday I was pulling weeds in the garden and the thought went through my mind that if I just gave this garden a few more years, I could finally get all these weeds under control and I'd have a beautiful, weed-free garden! I had some amazing visions of this picture-perfect garden that I would have ... but those visions only lasted milliseconds because my mind immediately started searching the memory banks for gardens that had been tended for years. Naturally, I thought of Grandpa's garden and compared mine to his, hoping that I would recall visions of weed-free rows of vegetation.

But that's not what I saw in my mind as I yanked out yet another clump of weeds. I saw pictures of Grandpa, slightly bent with his hoe gently chopping the ground around each precious pepper plant. He'd stop, tip his hat to wipe his forehead, look around a bit, and then bend back down and continue tending to that garden. Even after some 70 years of tending that same garden, he STILL had to deal with weeds!

Stephen has been interested a lot lately in Jesus' parable of the sower who sowed seeds on different types of soil. (Matthew 13) In this parable, some seeds fell among the thorns and were choked out. Jesus said that the seed - God's Word - can fall among the thorns, or the cares of this world and the deceitfulness of riches, and the Word of God is choked out and the seed doesn't grow.

Because we've been talking about this often as a family, I had to think about these weeds that I was pulling out of the garden. Sure, I had the hopes that if I could just pull ALL the weeds out of the garden over the next year or two I could have a perfect garden, but in reality, those weeds will never be totally conquered in my garden. Look at Grandpa's! If I could have truly observed Grandpa's spiritual garden, I bet he was still pulling weeds in his 94th year! Grandpa didn't have a weed-free garden after all those years, but he sure knew how to deal with them! He was in that garden every day on a regular basis taking care of the weeds that were a threat to his precious plants. He didn't just let them go and have a defeatist attitude about the fact that there would always be weeds and he'd never be able to get rid of all of them! He worked at it consciously! The Apostle Paul said that he "died daily" - it was a routine thing for him to work on his "weeds" in his life!

Ok, I'm writing this late at night, so some of my analogies may not be perfect, but I do believe that God wanted to teach me a lesson in my weedy garden this week. I want a beautiful garden. I want a productive garden. I don't want to have to work hard at it. God is showing me, though, that in order to have a beautiful and productive garden, I DO have to work at it! I need to consciously tend and care for the garden of my life and make sure that the seed of God's Word falls on GOOD ground and that if there are weeds there, I need to deal with them - and I will need to deal with them on an ongoing basis, but it needn't be a struggle all the time. If I care for my garden daily, taking care of a little weed here or there it will not overwhelm me. I can routinely care for my garden to keep the weeds at bay that will choke out the good seed.

I'm encouraged! Working in a garden in the heat of the day is not always pleasant, but if I deal with these weeds first thing in the morning, every day, I can start my day with a clean plot and nothing there to choke out the Good Word of God! Yes. Starting the work of pulling out those weeds of distraction in the cool of the morning with the Lord can make my garden beautiful every day!

4 comments:

GramS said...

Very nicely put!
We all had to help in Grandpa's garden. It was so much easier to get the weeds out in the morning, when they were smaller, and before the hot sun dried the dirt and hardened the ground around the plant. Grandpa was an example to us of weeding his physical and spiritual gardens. At the time we were in his garden, we looked at it as WORK, but it was so necessary. Thanks for bringing back the memories.

Jenny said...

My father always said that weeds are like sins. There easiest to get rid of when they are small.
I love my garden. I feel closer to God in a garden than anywhere else! I'm always amazed to see the seeds I planted come up, to see more flowers on my roses and zinnias. I'm always thankful to pick the herbs to dry for Winter.
I asked God to bless my garden and he is! If he cares so much about blessing my garden how much more will he answer my other prayers... especially the ones about my children?
God is sooooo good! :)

a. peg said...

there's just something special about gardening. There are so many examples of Jesus as a "gardener" and the tips He gave. All we have to do is follow them. I'm reminded that He is the vine and we are the branches. \\And there's the gardens that yeilded some sixty and some a hundredfold. so what makes the difference? Obviously, good seed, planting at the right time, with the soil properly tilled,tender care, weeding, frequent watering, sunshine... you have to have it all or your results are NONE. Love your analogy. And yes, I learned so much from Grandpa, and from Grandpa Pamer as well.

Anonymous said...

Thanks, Martha,
I'm so grateful that we can still learn from Grandpa!
Very well put!
A.Kath