The seed
By
Eric Haselhorst
Director,
Stewardship Office
The latest book I am reading has a quote
in it by Freidrich Wilhelm Nietzsche (1844-1900).
Nietzsche believed more in “life-affirmation” versus Christianity, but the
quote struck me: “Everyone thinks that the principal thing to the tree is
the fruit, but in point of fact the principal thing to it is the seed.”
If
you have not noticed by my writing, I am a man of many metaphors. And this
metaphor is a principal philosophy to what we are as Christians: seeds. God
bestowed upon us an undying gift at our baptism: Salvation through him.
Through
baptism, we have been called to discipleship. As disciples, we are stewards.
This is the seed Nietzsche talks about. We have been given seeds of life to
nourish in Christ to become closer to him. They have been sowed. It is our job
to nourish them everyday. Water with prayer. Fertilize
with love. Weed out the sin of our lives.
Any
farmer will tell you the work begins when the crop is in the bin. They may take
a few days off, but the planning for the next harvest begins when the combines
have been blown off and the trucks are parked for winter.
Countless
hours planning where the corn will go, which fields will be wheat. Numerous calls to seed dealers looking for the best hybrid to put
in the ground.
Then
the countless hours behind a windshield preparing the best possible environment
for the precious seed.
But
the work is not done; once the seed is planted there is insect control, weed
control, gates to open, sprinklers to turn on, walks
through the fields, weather to watch, top dress now or wait…. Everything a
farmer can control is managed.
So we have seeds planted in hearts by the waters poured over
us through baptism. God gave us freewill. Do we let weeds grow? Are the fields
of our minds fertilized with good books, activities, friends and relationships?
Are we cultivating the best possible environment for the gifts Jesus gave us?
I can tell you, I would be a modest farmer at
best. But the beauty is, I get another season to get
it right, just like you. Everyday is a new opportunity to kill the weeds of
sin, to water with positive people, to fertilize with a new book or capitalize
on a new opportunity. To answer God’s call to be one
of his own. The fruit of our lives is the result, but we start as a seed.