Harvest-Minded People: Good Roots, Good Fruit

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When I was growing up, we’d go visit my grandparents a few weekends out of each year. Upon arriving, I wanted two things: one, to be the very center of my Grandma’s attention (she has always been on the list of my Top 5 Favorite People) and, two, to go upstairs to her closet and try on every single pair of shoes in her extensive shoe collection.

While I was upstairs clomping around in her heels, My Grandma and Mom would be in the garden. My Grandma had planted flowers in almost every part of her yard. She had deep purple Irises taller than I was, and in July the Tiger-Lillies put on their bright-orange prom gowns just for me. There were daisies and hostas and touch-me-nots. There were roses of every color, and hydrangeas with faces bigger than mine. Bees buzzed, butterflies fluttered, hummingbirds hovered. My Grandma and my Mom would spend hours out in the garden, talking about flowers and bulbs and pruning.

The Matriarchs in my family have a long tradition of plant-sharing. I distinctly remember my Grandma pointing out certain flowers and saying “these came from Mama’s,” and “these are from Ruth’s.” In the same way, my Mom’s yard is a testament to the women who’ve come before. “Great-Grandma Hall’s Phlox” have been growing by the front porch for as long as I can remember. I marvel over this - one plant, growing and blooming healthily for decades, in three separate yards. Good roots, in the hands of loving gardeners, producing blooms for years.

Jesus talked a lot about fruit - to Jesus, fruit was an outward way to see someone’s heart.
— Pastor Jessica

In John 15, on his last night with the disciples, Jesus tells his friends that he loves them, that he wants them to love others and to bear good fruit that will last. Jesus talked a lot about fruit - to Jesus, fruit was an outward way to see someone’s heart. At the time, there were plenty of religious leaders and religious people who claimed to love God, but their fruit gave them away - they were judgmental and too wrapped up in making sure everyone was following the rules that they ignored those in their midst who were suffering and in need of love. But someone who got it - someone who truly loved God bore good fruit - they were so filled with love that it overflowed into every aspect of daily life.

Jesus says that the way to bear good fruit is to abide in his love. That’s it. There’s no complicated formula or list of extensive list of rules to follow. Our good fruit is the love that we outpour naturally when we’re so connected to and filled with Jesus’s love for us.

Great-Grandma Hall’s Flox, Grandma Phillips’ Gardenias, Camille’s Peonies, all growing in my Mom’s yard, don’t have to try to bloom. Fruit doesn’t try to grow. The azaleas don’t bloom because they’ve made up their mind to do so. The trees trust that the Gardener will send rain and sunshine that will stretch their branches to bring us shade and a spot to hang our tire-swings. Blossoms and fruit are what happens naturally to a branch that is abiding in it’s vine’s good roots in the care of a trust-worthy Gardener. And so it is with us.

Jesus says that the way to bear good fruit is to abide in his love. That’s it. There’s no complicated formula or list of extensive list of rules to follow.
— Pastor Jessica

Being harvest-minded people starts with checking our own fruit. Where are our hearts? How has my love for Jesus influenced my love for others? Have I lived like a person who loves Jesus and who dares to call him a friend? Does the fruit I bear point to the greatness and care of the Gardener?

May we be people who know that we are beloved by Jesus, not because of anything we can do, but for some divine reason that we’ll never fully grasp. May we so embody that unexplainable love that we can’t stop ourselves from extending it to others. May our fruit bear witness to the one for whom our hearts long. May our relationships with Jesus truly matter, not just to us but to those we come into contact with, as well.

Amen

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Harvest-Minded People: Good Soil

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Harvest-Minded People