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Jan 2, 2014

Tilling the Soil

Erazim Kohak once wrote, “a metaphor is a mask that molds the wearer’s face.” Indeed, metaphors matter. They shape our thoughts and, working in our subconscious, help us to decipher the myriad of experiences we encounter daily that defy the description provided by natural language alone. A metaphor can convey in a single word what might otherwise take paragraphs to explain. Such is the metaphor of the gardener. Even as you read this word an image floods into your mind. You can’t help it, you picture something.

As citizens of the Ancient Near East the writers of Holy Scripture were particularly fond of metaphors. Found frequently in poetic and prophetic passages God is depicted as a father, a mother, a hen, a fire, a wind, a king, and, most relevant to this discussion, a gardener. When I imagine God as a gardener it is difficult not to envision him as a somewhat effeminate figure kneeling before a flower or two, pruning petals with a full brimmed hat and gloved hands. He is always old, and gentle looking. There might even be an apron in there somewhere.  And that is the way metaphors work. They bring to mind prototypes or models that allow our minds to conceive of new dimensions in our reality. When I hear of God as a gardener my mind intuitively runs to images of gardeners I have seen in the past in film, literature or art. And herein lies the risk of metaphors. So much is left to the interpreter. People often see this most clearly when they begin to think that when God calls himself a father he means to imply that he is just like their father and end up having a horribly wrong idea of who God is. The model they bring to mind makes all the difference.

And so it is that this metaphor was at the forefront of my mind this week when I spent some time building a garden for my wife. Not a dainty little plot for marigolds, but a garden; a garden that will host beefsteak tomatoes, Chinese eggplant, and butternut squash. Not a tiny mulched piece of earth in the corner of our yard, but a fenced-in fortress that promises to fend off any potential scurvy for our three growing, young men; a survival garden of sorts.  

This week as I spent time as a gardener, God’s use of the metaphor for himself began to come into focus with greater clarity. Each day I woke before the sun rose and dressed quietly in a still house. I put on the same pair of filthy jeans and dirt-stained hoodie and entered a yard speckled with frost. For almost 10 hours a day I hauled timbers, set fence posts, pounded spikes and unrolled yards of steel fencing.

My task was to take an unusable piece of ground and force it to bear fruit. In order to do so I had to pierce the soil to set corner posts. When roots cut across my intended path, I took an axe to them. When my shovel hit a stone I sunk to my knees and plunged my hands into the cold soil to fish them out. I pounded a hefty sledge, I smashed two of my fingers, my hoe sliced back and forth across the soil and I cursed…often audibly.  

At the end of every day my back was unbearably sore, my forearms were numb and my body filled the shower with mud and sweat just before my head hit the pillow feeling as if I could close my eyes for days.  Such was the work necessary to bring about the kind of transformation that would enable my yard to produce food instead of weeds. 

When God calls himself a Gardener he is not encouraging us to think about joining him for a walk along a manicured path or to merely sit on a bench in the morning sun. He is, in no uncertain terms, assuring us of his desire to till the soil of our life. With dirty hands and weathered tools he plans to cultivate our thorn-ridden, overgrown, weed invested souls into fertile land that can produce the finest fruit the world has seen. He wants to make the abandoned lot of my heart, and yours, into a space that beckons others with its beauty and bewilders them with astonishing transformation. But in order to do so, many things need to die along the way.
Roots needs to be torn out of the ground, stones need to be plowed up from the hard soil, hills need to be leveled, and a great pile of brush often needs to be burned.

Many people will look back on the past year of their life with regret. There were roots they tripped on, stones too big to move, and soil left barren for so long that nothing could survive in it. Maybe their own attempts to transform the landscape have only left them feeling more exhausted and bitter than ever; after so many days with the shovel, the yard still looks nothing like they had hoped so they have given up on the project.

But I know a gardener who is looking for some work. I assure you he is not interested in doing just a bit of pruning. There may be thick roots that need to be pulled. Huge boulders might need to be lifted. Sunbaked soil may need to be tilled. It might be tempting at times to fire him, but if you patiently let him work, he promises that even the most barren land can burst forth with life. 

From one garden to another, Happy New Year.  



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I am a father and I am a son. I am adopted and rescued...a friend of Jesus. I am Carrie's husband and dad to Luke, Andrew and Zachary. I am the Director of Spiritual Formation at Toccoa Falls College and an ordained pastor in the Evangelical Presbyterian Church (EPC). I am a teacher who loves to engage the world with words and I am a Christian who aims to be the Good News in speech in deed. I am an artist attempting to create good art that glorifies the Creator and encourages his creation to seek him.