I was flipping through a garden magazine last week when I came across this advertisement for a weed whacker. The ad read, “Effortlessly tackle tough weeds with braided carbon steel blades. The trimmer tackles tough weeds effortlessly. Save time with easy set-up. Keep every space looking its best. It can handle anything outside, giving you a beautifully maintained garden you can be proud of.”
Makes it sound easy, doesn’t it? A perfectly manicured and weedless garden. Well, not perfect and certainly not weedless. That will not happen. Until the harvest time according to Jesus’ eschatological vision, when the darnel and the wheat will be separated—at the end of the age.
But what about now? How are we to live? Jesus teaches that the kingdom is not yet fulfilled. That is yet to come. In the meantime, the world is complicated, with many questions unanswered or unanswerable. We live among the good and the evil and the somewhere in between. There are the redeemed, the believers, and the committed. There are also the unredeemed and the uncommitted.
But who are we to judge the human heart? To separate the wheat from the weeds? That will be up to the Sower, the Son of Man. Jesus teaches that the kingdom of God is a gift of divine grace offered to all of those willing to receive it and commit to it. Thriving in God’s garden among the weeds, our own included, with unexpected visits from the unidentified enemy, requires our patience, forbearance, acceptance of God’s grace, and above all, our love—all that he modeled when our Lord lived among us.
So let us truly see in order to perceive, truly listen in order to hear, truly keep our hearts alive and able to understand the eternal message of the Lord:
“Repent, for the kingdom of God is at hand.”
—The Rev. Shirley Ruedy,
Deacon, Trinity Episcopal Church of Staunton
Image source: https://thegoodheart.blogspot.com/2011/07/priorities-wheat-or-weeds.html
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