Community Gardening

By Sharron R. Blezard, February 13, 2014

Sixth Sunday after Epiphany, Year A

February 16, 2014

The one who plants and the one who waters have a common purpose, and each will receive wages according to the labor of each. For we are God’s servants, working together; you are God’s field, God’s building. 1 Corinthians 3:8-9

They’re becoming a more common sight: From Sheyenne, North Dakota, to Detroit, Michigan, and from New Cumberland, Pennsylvania, to Los Angeles, California, plots of previously unused or abandoned land are turned into lush gardens bearing an abundance of fruits and vegetables. The wonderful thing about these gardens is that they are a communal effort. For minimal cost, people who otherwise might not have space or knowledge about how to grow their own food are combining efforts to learn, tend, and harvest a variety of healthy produce. In addition to improving their diets and decreasing what must be purchased, these gardeners share information, skills, tools, and form strong community bonds around this common purpose.

In this week’s epistle reading Paul has a thing or two to say about community gardening. Of course, he’s talking about “soul food” and 4676757080_b39fae0c96cultivating faithful disciples, and not comparing kale and collards or considering the benefits and hindrances of organic growth versus integrated pest management. Nonetheless, vegetable gardening and spiritual sowing have quite a bit in common.

In community gardens, success is proportionate to the willingness of all participants to “buy into” the program. Folks invest time, energy, and resources into every aspect, from tilling the soil, to weeding and fertilizing, and to harvesting the fruits and vegetables at the correct times to ensure the highest possible yield and the best stewardship of each precious plant. Even so, the gardeners themselves do not completely control the end result.

The church functions in much the same way, as Paul points out, saying “I planted, Apollos watered, but God gave the growth” (1 Corinthians 3:6). The faithful “gardeners” are fully engaged in the work of cultivating disciples, but God provides the sun (or in this case, the Son) and rain and good conditions for the fledgling sprouts to grow into faithful maturity.

Faith gardening is risky business over which we good church folk have precious little control over outcome. And yet, we still worry and fret as if we do have control. In fact, we often worry so much about the weeds that we forget to pull them. We fret over the lack of growth, even though we know it’s impossible to watch most plants grow before our eyes. Yes, we fret about the troublesome events and trends in our faith gardens and we lament the lack of growth and failure to thrive, but at the same time, we fail to give glory and honor to the source of all life and 8202816524_96dd879ba2growth. We fail to trust the master gardener to bring about the growth and maturity we so desperately crave for our precious plots. Have you ever, for example, watched a faith community resist moving to a better location even though the leaders know that a new site will get more light and generate lush growth.

Our individual and corporate faith development and community growth depends on our willingness to let God control our plans and direction. How faithfully we produce and the results we yield depend on our ability to hear and heed Jesus’ call and words of instruction. We have choice. We can plant or we can piddle around. We can water and fertilize, or we can ignore what’s been planted and let it wither. We can be part of a flourishing and fertile community garden, or we can opt out of life together and miss out on the blessings and abundance of God’s harvest. So, what will you choose this day: Will it be life and prosperity or death and adversity?

In Worship

What does it mean to “choose life” in a time when it seems that the church is out of the cultural loop? How do we share the good news in a context that is regularly indifferent and occasionally outright hostile to our efforts? Maybe this is a good time of year to initiate a “Choose Life” project in your community, identifying healthy life-giving practices of eating well, exercise, and spiritual growth and discipline. If you start now, engaging leaders and planning programs, you’ll be just in time to use this as a Lenten focus. We are called to be a counter-cultural people, and “choosing life” means following and loving God, and loving neighbor as self. In order to accomplish these things, we must love ourselves enough to choose healthy and whole practices. God does give the growth when we plant and water. How can your congregation begin or augment a healthy life initiative for mind, body, and spirit?

With Youth

Jesus’ words from Matthew’s gospel this week are tough ones to tackle, but they can lead to some rich conversation with youth. What does it mean to do “just enough” to fulfill the letter of the law? In school, that might mean doing the minimum to skate by, to fulfill the requirement but not go the extra mile to learn and grow. For Jesus, the religious folk of the day were all about meeting the requirements, but they didn’t dig deeper to get to the “why” of the requirements and to learn how the law gives life. He uses the formula “You have heard that it was said…” and then adds “But I say to you…” Jesus asks us to go deeper and really focus on what matters and on why it matters. Consider asking the youth to tackle some of the issues Jesus addresses and then invite them to think of additional ones. What does this mean for their spiritual growth, for their Christian witness, and for how they can share real life with the world?

With Children

Growing in Faith

For this illustration, you will need a bag of carrots, a package of carrot seeds, and a jar of carrot baby food. You might also have a simple story Bible, a study Bible and a Greek New Testament on hand Ask the children what all these “carrot” things have in common. Of course, the answer is carrots. But we don’t eat carrot seeds, do we? No, we plant them, tend them, water them, feed them, and help them to grow so that we can eat them. Can babies eat the carrots from our garden? No, of course not. That’s why we cook, puree, and fix carrot baby food for them. They still get all the goodness and benefit of the vitamin A and nutrients, but they get it in a form they can use and digest. We, on the other hand, can eat our carrots raw, cooked, or in recipes–like carrot cake (yum!) with cream cheese frosting. Paul talks about these important distinctions to the Corinthian Christians. We need to have food appropriate to our faith levels, too. That’s why we have simple story Bibles. Later on we use study Bibles. Pastors often use Bibles printed in their original languages for in-depth study. We grow in faith just like the carrot seeds grow to become food for babies and children and adults. God gives the growth. We help by tending, watering, feeding, and harvesting. God gives the faith growth, too. We help by worshiping, learning, and sharing our faith. Invite the children to help you finish with a “popcorn prayer.” Let each child have a turn making a prayer request. If they can’t think of anything have them simply say “Thank you, Jesus!” Finish with a blessing.

Photos: d-olwen-dee and bormang2

 

About the Author

The Rev. Sharron Riessinger Blezard is an ELCA pastor currently rostered in the Lower Susquehanna Synod. She came to ordained ministry after teaching secondary and college English, working in non-profit management and public relations, and moonlighting as a freelance writer. See more posts by .

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