Thursday, July 24, 2014

Producing for Him

For the last few years I’ve attempted to raise a garden. I say “attempted” because it has proven to be quite a challenge for a guy with Brown thumbs.

In an effort to have success this year I decided to change things a bit. In the past my garden was bigger than I could handle, so I cut down the size of the plot. I also set it up so that watering could be done more efficiently. Efforts that would surely produce more vegetables.

I worked the ground early and had a beautiful seedbed ready to receive my seeds and plants. Plenty of early rain brought the seedlings up and helped them grow. This year was going to be different!

But eventually the rain stopped coming and summer temps began rising.

A busy life kept me away from the garden for a while, but a couple of days ago I finally went out to dig some potatoes and pick some beans. But I was greeted with an unhappy sight. My beautiful garden and the early rains were yielding a bumper biomass… but it was an inedible one.  Weeds! 

Worse yet, I had planted six rows of potatoes and seven rows of beans and my yield was a 5-gallon bucket full of potatoes and enough beans for two meals. Nuts!   I got little of what I wanted and way more of what I didn’t want!

So instead of harvesting - my time was spent weeding. And as I weeded I was thinking, “This is not what I had in mind.

Then it occurred to me that God probably pondered the same thought too.  After all, when He created the world all was good – for a while. But perfection ended all too soon – “weeds” of sin began to grow – and they choked out the anticipated fruit. Was this what He had in mind?

My thoughts went to what God might be thinking of me and the results to-date in my life. When He goes out to the “garden” does He find an inedible biomass or much anticipated fruit?  I couldn’t bear the thought that He might say of the produce of my life, “This is not what I had in mind!”

We have all been called, as John the Baptist said to the Pharisees, “To bear fruit in keeping with repentance.” When we plant a garden we expect it to produce fruit. God created us. And, if we allow and accept it, He plants His mercy, grace and forgiveness in us. He then expects good fruit from us.

There is great news for those who have accepted God’s gifts.

I am the vine; you are the branches. If a man remains in Me and I in him, he will bear much fruit; apart from Me you can do nothing. You did not choose Me, but I chose you and appointed you to go and bear fruit – fruit that will last.”  John 15:5, 16a 

We’ve just celebrated 125 years as a church. Our theme for this celebration was “May all who come behind us find us faithful.”  Simple edits would make that theme, “May God, and all who come behind us, find us fruitful!

I don’t want to be a weed patch!  So, I’m thankful that if I stay close – attached – to the Vine, I can produce the fruit He had in mind when He “planted” me. And I look forward to someday hearing Him say, “Well done! This is what I had in mind!”  I hope you want the same. Together, let’s grow to go and produce His fruit!


Committed to producing for Him - Brown thumbs and all,

Ron