The promise of growth

The long, garden shrouds are the perfect ending
my glum rule-of-three walk. Looking like body bags for giant caterpillars,
they stretch out in the dormant plots of a community garden. They are just what I need for my musing on
the end of the year.
Like a folk tale, my
walk has been building in a triad of similar scenes. Each of the stops has had an element of
deterioration and missed potential.
Stop one was an abandoned greenhouse. When
filled with seedlings, such a place welcomes a visitor with a rush of warm,
moist air, brimming with expectation.
This structure, with broken windows and overrun with dead weeds, seems
forlorn and forgotten.
Stop two was even sadder. As I passed a
large, isolated house, I saw bright yellow signs announcing that the house was
no longer “fit for human habitation.”
Peering through the windows, I saw rooms with people’s neglected
belongings.
All three echo the
melancholy words of Terry Malloy, the washed-up boxer from On the Waterfront: “I coulda
been somebody.”
This is the time of year when I pause and
evaluate. I look back over the last twelve months and
with a cold eye to judge how well I’ve progressed toward my intents at the
start. I actually give myself
grades. And have for many years.
But, despite my dour visuals
above, I am not discouraged by my perennial don’t-show-the-parents personal
report card. I do miss the mark. And I often think I “coulda been somebody” better. But Philippians 4:13 reminds me (translated
by David Martyn Lloyd Jones), “I am strong for all things through the One who
constantly infuses strength into me.”
He goes on:
“The very essence of the Christian life,
according to the New Testament teaching everywhere, is that it is a mighty
power that enters into us; it is a life, if you like, that is pulsating in
us. It is an activity, and an activity
on the part of God.”
In folk tales, the third time something
happens, it has a twist. In my three visuals, the shrouds in the garden
are different because they are more than signs of life regretted, of missed
opportunity. They are life ongoing:
plants protected from the cold, waiting to burst into fruit again.
This is what I need to
remember as the calendar resets itself.
God is at work in me. He is
active – to will and to work for his good pleasure. And he empowers me at every turn, regardless
of my spotty track record, to join him in the work.
As if to punctuate the
moral of my story, on my walk back, I pass a forsythia branch with an
improbable, winter blossom.
It is never too late
to grow.
Our power to be different comes
from you, Lord. As we contemplate how
you would have us change in this coming year, guide our attention to your
activity. Help us to unleash your power
through the habits we develop. We want
to grow!
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