Planting Seeds

Planting Seeds

Over the years of ministry, in my spare time, I’ve really come to enjoy being involved in projects in which I can actually see the results: mowing the grass, tearing off old siding on a home and then replacing it, putting a fresh coat of paint on things, volunteering for Habitat. I think I enjoy doing these kinds of projects not only because most of my day is up here (in my head), but also because at the end of the day, I can look back and say, “Done.” I can see the results.

With so much of ministry, we don’t see the results. We don’t see the immediate impact. Sometimes not until years later. Sometimes not at all.

So the parable Jesus tells about the sower, sowing seeds really speaks to me.

In this parable that Jesus gives a lot of attention to the failure inherent in sowing seeds. Three-quarters of the efforts fail! And yet… in spite of the failure, in spite of the rejections, in spite of the lost seed, the lost time, the lost energy, in the end, there is a harvest.

Jesus says that the kingdom of God is like this…

What’s clear in these parables is that the results are beyond our control. If a seed grows at all, it grows on its own timetable, you can’t force it. Sometimes people will respond – to our invitation to come to church… to our prayers for them… to our generosity, to our compassion, to our offer of forgiveness. And sometimes they won’t. Sometimes we’ll see the fruit of our work – but sometimes we won’t. But like the sower, our job is to keep sowing, taking small steps, planting small seeds…

Archbishop and 20th Century Martyr Oscar Romero once wrote:
That is what we are about:
We plant seeds that one day will grow.
We water seeds already planted, knowing that they hold future promise.
We lay foundations that will need further development.
We provide yeast that produces effects beyond our capabilities.
We cannot do everything and there is a sense of liberation in realizing that. This enables us to do something and to do it very well. It may be incomplete, but it is a beginning, a step along the way, and an opportunity for God’s grace to enter and do the rest.

Let us pray: Meet us today, O God, at the deepest point of our need. We ask for healing, mercy, and for grace. And then, even as we are being healed, use us as instruments of your peace. May the seeds we sow be a blessing to you. Amen.

Daily Message Author: Joe Albright

Joe began his ministry in Sarasota, Florida as an associate pastor, and it was in this capacity that he worked alongside the Reverend Dr. Roger Kunkel. Roger was a colleague who became a mentor and treasured friend. From Sarasota, Joe was called to Jacksonville, Florida where he served as the Head of Staff at Hodges Boulevard Presbyterian Church. Currently, Joe and his family worship and serve at Geneva Presbyterian Church in Switzerland, Florida. Full Bio

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