The “s” word (sin) has virtually gone out of our vocabulary in this “anything goes” culture in which we live. But you can be sure of one thing (or you will be eventually) that the things the Scriptures call sin all have unwanted consequences. In terms of reaping what we sow one preacher put it this way: “Sin takes us further than we want to go, keeps us longer than we want to stay and costs us more than we want to pay.”
So I used to think that Jesus was clever, but in the end I realized that He is far more clever than I ever imagined. I came to realize that He designed creation to be a living parable of the spiritual. So there are both weeds and wheat, joy and sorrow. Spring is a parable of resurrection, fall reminds us that all things come to an end. And as we can see the beauty of the fall in the fall colours, so we can learn to grow old gracefully and appreciate the finer things of life. Or (as I used to do in our all too short summers) resent the fact that the weather is getting colder, and the days shorter. After the fall, if we have eyes to see and patience to wait, we can see that it's not always winter. So when we go through the seasons of barrenness, when it looks like everything is dead, through our experience of the seasons we can see that God is at work even in that time preparing for the new birth and the new growth of spring.
Jesus is widely regarded as the best teacher the world ever had. Both His words and His creation can instruct us in the way that we should go. And if we are listening we will reap the good fruit of listening. If we are not we will reap the harvest of not doing so. In particular we cut ourselves off from the source of all real love and joy and peace and hope. The Lord is speaking to us in creation, in the stars as the heavens declare the Glory of God. He is speaking to me in my gardening as am gardening for the first time in years (more to come). The question then is this “Are we listening, are you, am I?”
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