About

BASED IN NASHVILLE, TENNESSEE, THESE ARE MORNING DEVOTIONALS BY RICH FORBES. HIS POSTS EXPLORE CHRISTIANITY THROUGH PRAYER AND SCRIPTURE.

Weeding our Garden of Faith

06/29/2023

 

I am looking at my life this morning in such a way as to identify those things that are stumbling blocks to my faith. I am asking myself the simple question... "Am I separating myself from those things that stand between God and me?" Is my life focused sufficiently on Him, and cleansed of those encumbrances to my faith?

 

“And if your right hand causes you to sin, cut it off and throw it away. For it is better that you lose one of your members than that your whole body go into hell.”

Matthew 5:30 ESV

 

Sometimes we move forward in faith by doing certain things, like praying for instance, while at other times we do so by letting things go... such as old habits or friends that stifle our faith. In Colossians 3:2-17 we are told to think on virtuous things and to put others behind us. This scripture reads, in part, like this...

 

“Set your minds on things that are above, not on things that are on earth. For you have died, and your life is hidden with Christ in God. When Christ who is your life appears, then you also will appear with him in glory.”

Colossians 3:2-4 ESV

 

And,

 

“In these you too once walked, when you were living in them. But now you must put them all away: anger, wrath, malice, slander, and obscene talk from your mouth.”

Colossians 3:7-8 ESV

 

So we are told that there are things we should be doing, such as setting our minds on things above, and that there are things we should let go, like anger and obscene talk.

 

Several years ago I made a garden with my father in law, and as I tilled the ground with his powerful tiller I walked easily behind it and thought ahead to planting the seeds and of all the vegetables we would have... this was the process of doing. Later, as the seeds began to sprout, they were joined by weeds that were growing back from the remnants of many rogue plants that had been left behind. When the weeds appeared, I had to hoe, and to get on my hands and knees to pull each one from the ground. This was the hard work of separating the old residents of the ground from what was now to be a beautiful garden. Both had to be done if I was to have a garden and gather the bounty that I had imagined when I first began to till the ground. Our faith is like this too; there are things that we do as we move forward in faith, but there are also things we must undo in order to move smoothly ahead.

 

Today Let’s take stock of where we are in this process. Are we at a place where tilling our gardens of faith is in order, or is it time to weed the rows of vegetables? Jesus used the symbolism of cutting off our right hand. This was very powerful in His time because the right hand was thought of as one's good hand, and represented strength and truth. So when Jesus told them that they might have to cut off their right hand, He was saying that they might have to separate themselves from things they valued and thought were good and true. Are we faced with that same choice today? Are there things in our lives that we think are good, and that bring us comfort or joy, but will stand in our way as we follow Jesus?

 

Sometimes hard choices are required. When I made the garden with my father in law I planted several rows of sweet corn. I planted the seeds 3 inches apart, but when they had sprouted and were standing about four or five inches tall, I had to thin them out. I had to pull up perfectly good corn plants so that I only had one plant every foot. This was a painful process. I was pulling up plants I knew were good so that my garden could flourish. Without doing this, the corn would not produce as it should and the harvest would be reduced. It was as if I were severing my right hand. Removing something good so that the goal of a bountiful harvest could be reached.

 

Are hard choices presenting themselves in our lives today? They are in mine from time to time! Pulling up weeds is a difficult task, but you know they must go, yet when we have to separate ourselves from seemingly good things in order to give ourselves room for growth... it is painful. Pastor's do this when God calls them to a new church, or a different ministry. It isn't the easy task of separating themselves from sin, but a rather hard task of serving God in accordance with His will for them. They are leaving good people and circumstances in order to do the next good thing in their growth of faith, or to allow those they leave behind room to grow.

 

Are we ready to make the hard choices when we are faced with them?

 

Prayer:

 

Father, I thank you for the vision of this garden we are making together, and I thank you for teaching me to pull the weeds so that my faith will grow. I also thank you for teaching me the importance of separating myself from some things I have come to know as good. Your will for me, and those around me, is perfect and in as much I will trust in your wisdom. Ease my pain Holy Father as I follow your will and separate myself from those things that are not sinful or bad, but require room to grow as you desire. I realize that once this separation is complete I will praise you for the result, so help me heal quickly from the wound of the severing, and show me the joy of a new beginning and increased faith in you. My hand remains in yours, and my knees feel the cool fresh soil of the garden... Father show me your heart, your will, and the way you would have me go. Praised be your name; because your efforts are tireless, and your choices perfect, as we work this garden together.

 

Rich Forbes

Anger, and the Lines on our Faces

Our Shout across a Raging Sea

0