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The Garden of God’s Word

Before I enter scripture itself, I wanted to begin with it as a whole.  God’s word is very much like a wonderful garden, filled with all kinds of produce.  And, it is a garden that reflects back at us all of the thorns and thistles of our lives.  When I was growing up, my parents kept a large vegetable garden.  This garden usually caused me to lament the coming of Saturday, for I often was made to spend them pulling up weeds or tilling the soil when I would have rather been playing baseball or watching cartoons like my friends.  Yet, though we all sweated and toiled over it, the produce was always a blessing on the dinner table. 

God’s word is the same way.  As a Christian, we need to labor in it.  It takes work to root out the deep truths and riches that it contains.  Does that mean that the Bible is full of thorns and thistles, subject to the fall?  Certainly not!  The thorns and thistles are the things that we bring to the table.  These are our secret sins and lusts.  The word of God is powerful and potent when it comes to convicting men of their sinful ways.  And if we are going to approach the word of God seeking its fruit, then those thorns and thistles in our own life must be pulled out by the root.

But what a rich variety of fruit that lies within God’s Word!  There are the sweet berries of God’s promises, the abundant and hearty beans of God the Father’s nature revealed within, the spicy peppers of the power of God the Holy Spirit moving through history, and the earthy tubers of God the Son’s work on earth.  There are the majestic and flowering fruit trees of God’s grace and there are the bitter radishes of God’s judgment on unbelievers.  And the abundance therein proclaims without hesitation God’s glory and his constancy toward and provision for his people. 

And just as is with any healthy garden, it is full of life.  Worms to till the soil, bugs to pollinate, and birds to fill the trees with song, God’s word is alive and healthy and how the Christian ought to long to rest therein for all of his days.  And the garden most importantly is a garden that is fed with a spring of pure and living water, even though it is surrounded by a dry and arid land.  What an oasis we have in God’s Word!  Oh, how the Christian inflicts such pain on himself by seeking the worldly pleasures of baseball and cartoons over the riches of God’s word.

God’s Garden

(Genesis 2-3)

 

It would seem that God is the original gardener.  And what a garden he planted.  It was paradise!  Yet, what made it paradise is not the variety of beautiful and tasty plants, but God’s own presence therein.   God strolled freely with Adam and Eve in the garden.  Even the pits of hell would be paradise with Him as a companion. Yet this garden also was not fallen.  There were no thorns or thistles, there were no pesky rocks to till out, and there were no diseases within the place.  There were no storms in Eden.  There were no natural disasters or floods to worry about; just the cool summer rain that fell gently on their backs.

There was no viciousness in the animals and no predators to worry about.  They could sleep under the stars gazing at a picture of God’s glory undefiled by the clouds of sin or the fear of darkness.  They lay naked and unashamed.  What a contrast this is to our world today.  And Adam and Eve gave all of this up for a bite of fruit and a lust to be like their creator.

It has been said that you never appreciate your blessings until they are gone.  How this truth is illustrated by Adam and Eve.  They threw away paradise!  And we would do the same if we got the chance.  How often we find ourselves longing for the “greener” grass on the other side of the hill.  We know that it is not greener, but our heart still yearns for it.  How often we reflect longingly at past paths of sin.  We only remember the fleeting moments of pleasure and never the lasting pain of guilt and grief.  Oh how often we see the seeds of temptation as harmless, yet, time and time again, they sprout in our fertile hearts.

Let our hearts long once again for paradise.  For the believer in Jesus Christ, paradise has been reserved for you in heaven, no more will the ravages of sin destroy.  Yet, as we look around at those we care about, we must ask, how many of them will not be joining us there.  Let us seek to plant the seeds of paradise in the hearts of those around us, that they might walk the cool meadows of heaven by our side.

Adam’s Garden

(Genesis 4)

 

What a contrast Adam’s garden is to God’s.  Adams is filled with rocks, thorns, and thistles.  It requires the sweat of the brow to be worked, and where was the eternal spring of water to nourish the produce?  And where was the presence of God, walking freely within?

There is such a difference between the things that God has made and the things that we attempt to make.  We marvel at our towers and sky-scrapers, yet God built the mountains to tower miles high.  We have seen towers topple as a result of earthquakes and hurricanes.  On September 11th a few years back, we found out how quickly towers fall in an explosion.  Yet, even with the explosive force of a volcano, which is millions of times more powerful than a detonating airliner and thousands of times more powerful than an atom bomb, there is still quite a formidable mountain that remains.  James says that the edifices of man will burn away like grass under the hot winds of the summer.  Pound for pound, the tensile strength of the silken strand of a spider-web is many times greater than that of man-made steel alloys.  Oh the vanity that lies with in the garden of the children of Adam.

And what fruit did Adam’s garden bear?  It bore the fruit of discontent and shame, for it was Cain the gardener who slew his brother in the fields.  And we are still slaying each other today in our fields.  Yes, we may be more subtle than to bash in our brother’s head with a rock, but when we destroy his marriage because of a fling with his wife, we do the same thing.  Calvin said that the heart of man is a factory of idols.  If that is the case, it is the mind of man that is the heart’s marketing firm.  And production is in high gear.  Not only do we fill our lives with the thorns and thistles of sin, but we export our sins to our neighbors and our children.  What a mess Adam’s garden was.  What a mess ours continues to be.

Noah’s Vineyard

(Genesis 9: 20-29)

 

What a picture of human nature we have painted for us here by Moses.  Noah, “the preacher of righteousness” to quote Peter, had just exited the ark and planted a vineyard.  Though that is not a bad thing in itself, what he does next is.  Noah becomes drunk and in some way exposes himself to his son Ham.  Ham, perhaps with a tinge of sarcasm or humor, tells his brothers, “guess what dad did!”  And all over again, we have the separation of the children of God and the children of the world.  Ham and his line are cursed and Shem’s line is blessed.

How often in our own lives have we fallen into this trap.  During times of great trial and difficulty our faith shines and is strong.  But during times of peace and prosperity, we let our guard down, falling prey to the sins of the world.  This is what happened with Noah.  Once he had a chance to relax, he fell back into his old ways.  Is this not the tendency of the church itself?  The times of greatest church growth are always during the times of great persecution and trial. 

I would argue that this is the greatest trial of the church in America today.  We have great freedoms when it comes to expressing our faith and in religion.  We don’t have to worry about government oppression or persecution.  While this is a great blessing, it has become a stumbling block for many.  Church has become culturally acceptable and in turn it requires no sincere commitment. 

I suggest that we learn from Noah’s folly.  Even in times of prosperity and rest, we need to keep our guard up.  Yes, we are reminded of the humanness of many of these “Bible heroes,” but more importantly, let the lessons of their failure fall on attentive ears.  Satan is always seeking to destroy, he is always lurking behind the next corner.  Though he may not attack with claw or bite, he will attack in some way and it may be with wealth and flattery.  Let us seek to live to God’s glory every day and in every moment and not fall into sin during times of relative comfort.

The Jordan Valley

 (Genesis 13)

 

When Abram offered Lot a choice of land to settle in, Lot chose the Jordan Valley for it was well watered as Eden had been.  Abram trusted in the Lord for his provision, but it is clear here, that Lot evaluated things by the way of men.  But what he found in that valley would eat at his heart.  Peter tells us that Lot’s heart was tormented because he lived and worked around the wicked men of Sodom.  The grass looked greener in the valley, as the Garden of the Lord, scripture tells us, but there was one thing missing from that garden altogether:  the presence of the Lord.  God had left those men to their wickedness.

So often this is a testimony to the result of our own decision making.  We often make our choices based on human ideas and terms.  “What do I think that I would like,” we ask.  “Where would I like to serve in ministry?”  “How should I spend MY money.”  Yet, the money does not belong to us, the ministry does not belong to us, and our life does not belong to us.  Thus, the only opinion of what we should or should not be doing that matters is the opinion of our Lord and Savior.  I think that it was Spurgeon who said that there is no ideal place to serve God—except where he puts you.  How often do we truly seek God’s will first and our will second.  Let us learn from righteous Lot the torment of making decisions based on human reasoning.

The Promised Land

 (Joshua 1)

 

The Israelites had been slaves in Egypt, having had to work to irrigate the gardens which they grew, they had traveled through the desert, with God as an oasis from the elements, and they were about to enter into the Promised Land.  This land was to be a place much like Eden, where the vegetation was lush and the thorns and thistles were few.  It was described as paradise, but Canaan was only meant as a partial fulfillment of God’s promise to his people.  Canaan had been polluted with the sin and wickedness of its inhabitants and the Israelites did anything but purge the land of sin.  Rather, they quickly joined in with the pagan revelries.

How little we do to preserve the purity of what God has given us.  We pollute our marriages with want and a wandering heart; we pollute our families with the things we teach our children to ignore.  We pollute our jobs with laziness and we pollute our relationship with our Creator with neglect and sin.  We may not have carved Baals and Asherahs, but we have set humanism and materialism in our hearts.  We need to turn our hearts back toward the Lord, seeking his glory and the joy of the promised land kept and preserved from ruin for those who would call on the name of Jesus for salvation.

Naboth’s Vineyard

(1 Kings 21)

 

Once more, we have a picture of Adam’s garden.  Ahab wanted that which was not his and Naboth was too stubborn to give the king what he wanted.  While Naboth is certainly “in the right” by all legal and moral estimations, he still coveted the land of his fathers.  Now we can certainly talk about Leverite law and how a family is to keep the land within the family, but we also must remember Samuel’s warning about the ways of kings (1 Samuel 8:14).

Perhaps Naboth was not aware that Ahab would seek his death.  Perhaps Naboth was not aware of the wiles of Jezebel.  No, that hardly seems possible.  Ahab had deliberately sought the death of the prophets of God.  Perhaps Ahab was just misunderstood by those pesky prophets.  “Ahab did more to provoke the LORD, the God of Israel, to anger than all of the kings of Israel who were before him” (1 Kings 16: 33).  I hardly think that there was any misunderstanding about the nature of Ahab.

Naboth coveted his land and would not give it up to the king.   Naboth had to know to what end this path would bring.  And once again, blood flowed.  Sticking to your guns is a good thing, even in the face of death, but I am not convinced that Naboth is doing just that.  So often we too hold stubbornly to the wrong things.  And usually those things are sins that God is calling us to mortify.  We must always remember that it is not our fathers who have given us their land, but it comes from God, and it is given for His glory, not our satisfaction.   He who giveth can also take.

Solomon’s Garden

(The Song of Solomon)

 

While it is important not to allegorize this book, there is a clear sense of looking both forward and back.  This is Solomon’s pursuit of a young lady, but the purity with which this pursuit is done is a model for all Christians today.  In addition, it points back to the purity of the marriage pursuit of Adam and Eve in the garden before the fall and it points forward to give us a picture of our Savior pursuing his bride, the church.

Yet, there is something else worth noting about the setting of this book.  This book describes a hidden garden where the maiden works.  The garden is a safe place, a place where these pursuits can take place without fear or threat.  Our homes need to exhibit that same sense of safety.  They need to be a place where husbands and wives can come together with joy and pleasure, knowing that they will not face the kind of the scrutiny that the world gives out.  And it needs to be a place of safety where children can retreat to and find comfort and hope therein when the world seems to hate them.  It must be a place of building up, not tearing down.

Is that how our spouse would describe our home?  How about our children?  If not, then there is cultivating to be done.

 

Jeremiah’s Garden of Hope

(Jeremiah 32)

 

The setting and timing of this event is as bleak as it gets.  The Chaldeans are bearing down on the city of Jerusalem.  They have been on a warpath conquering all of Judah, and the walled city of Jerusalem is one of the last holdouts.  Jeremiah has been preaching to the people that the reason that the Chaldeans have come is because God is using them to bring punishment on the people for their faithlessness.  Many wish to fight, Jeremiah is telling them to surrender, for this is God’s will.

Yet, as bleak as this time seems, there is a point of hope.  Though the promised land is about to be totally overrun by the Chaldeans, God instructs Jeremiah to buy the field of his cousin.  While this might seem contrary to common sense, God was using this purchase to make a statement.

Though Judah had sinned, though God was bringing catastrophic judgment on the people, God would also restore his people.  Jeremiah’s purchase was a sign that the land would be restored to the people of Israel.  They could not know this, but God would bring Cyrus to power in Persia to overthrow the Chaldeans, and would eventually send the exiles home.  The field that Jeremiah bought would eventually be redeemed, as would all the land.

Yet, we must remember, that even that hope was a temporary one.  Though there was repentance on the part of the people, a solution had to be had to atone for sin.  God had that planned as well, for he would later send his son Jesus to do just that and to prepare a land that is permanent and unfading for his people.  We have a great hope in Christ, dear friends; take courage.  Even though things may look bleak, God, is, as he has always been and always will be, in control.

Habakkuk’s Garden

(Habakkuk 3: 17-19)

 

In many ways, Habakkuk’s story is like that of Job’s.  Though Habakkuk had not been afflicted personally with trial, God’s people were being afflicted by their neighboring nations.  Assyria had conquered the northern Kingdom of Israel and Babylon had just conquered the kingdom of Assyria and would soon come to destroy the southern kingdom of Judah.  And behind it all is God’s hand of judgment on his people for their idolatry.  In the face of this, Habakkuk boldly places the question before God as to how he could do this.  How could God use the ungodly to punish his people?  And ultimately, by God’s grace, Habakkuk comes to the same conclusion as did Job:  God is sovereign and he will use those means that he chooses to rebuke his people.  Yet, no matter how harsh the rebuke may seem, God will redeem his people as well.  What a message of hope this is today, in a world that seems to have embraced chaos instead of holiness.

At the end of this little book, Habakkuk gives us a picture of his garden.  It is a picture of barrenness and destruction.  There is no blossom on the fig tree, no fruit on the fine, and the olive crops have failed.  There is nothing in the fields, either plant or animal, and there is nothing in the stalls.  This is a picture of a desolate land.  Yet, it is not desolate at all!  Why?  For he understands that his strength, his help, and his salvation do not come from the crops that he produces or the animals that he owns, but it comes from the hand of God himself.  God will deliver his people even when all of the means that this world has to offer are spent. 

In the time of impending doom that Judah was facing at this point, what a message of hope and encouragement this is.  What a stark reminder it is to us?  So often we look only with discouragement at our own gardens.  The things of our life may not be working out the way we have planned, never-the-less, if our trust is in God, he will provide for us our needs.  God is a great and merciful God, and is abundant in blessing toward his people.  Let us learn from Habakkuk’s own testimony; the sure provision of God is better than all that the world can provide.

A Treasure Hidden in a Field

 (Matthew 13:44)

 

This parable, I find to have some particularly interesting elements.  First of all, the man stumbles on the treasure by accident, or, more accurately, by God’s providence.  He was not looking for it and he found it in a field that had been tilled and planted by another who had not found the treasure.  Secondly, the field was not his own.  This says both that the man was trespassing and that the field’s owner had no interest in things of true value.

Yet, the setting is still a field or a garden.  It is a place that is not wild or unkempt but in a place that has been ordered and cultivated.  And even though the treasure finds the man if you will, it is worth noting that the place in which the treasure is found is not in the chaotic wilds.  So many people feel that the last place they can “find God” is in the church.  “I feel closer to God when I am outside in the middle of nature.”  Yet, usually, that is not where God is to be “found.”

I will admit that the church is often anything but a place of love and joy and compassion.  Yet it is a place that has ordered itself in such a way as to strive to emulate God’s will.  This is where God delights to make himself known.  Sometimes it catches us by surprise and sometimes we are diligently searching for it.  Regardless, unless we are in a place that strives to reflect God’s glory, the treasure will usually remain unseen.

Gethsemane

(Matthew 26:36)

 

What a sad garden, indeed.  It is the place where Jesus went to spend his final hours with his disciples.  It is the place where the disciples could not even stay awake with him in his final hour.  It is the place where one of his disciples would betray him.  And, it is the place where the rest of the disciples would flee.

How heavy our Lord’s heart must have been as he ascended this hill.  The Songs of the Pilgrims Praising God and announcing his triumphal entry less than a week earlier must have felt a lifetime away.  That night, darkness reigned.  Yet, though darkness made its false claim of triumph from this garden, in not too many days, the angels of the Lord would announce to the women Jesus’ triumph over death in another garden.  “He is not here for he has been raised!”  These words of hope have split the darkness in the heart of many a man.  It is a word which God has planted in the heart of all who he calls his own, that we might not only share the joy of a risen savior but so that we might be encouraged when we enter times where the devil appears to have triumphed.

Joseph of Arimathea’s Garden

(John 19: 38-42)

 

What a drastic contrast there was in this garden.  We are told that Joseph of Arimathea was one of the secret disciples of Jesus, and that he and Nicodemus (who dialogued with Jesus early in his ministry—see John 3) brought the body of Jesus to a tomb in a garden that Joseph had reserved for himself.

What a heavy heart they must have had.  They carried the lifeless body away from the ugliness of the cross to a place of beauty.  Their task was to prepare Jesus’ body for burial, and quickly, for the Sabbath was coming shortly.  Have you ever handled the body of a friend?  It is a sobering occasion.  When Jesus was a toddler, three Magi from the east had given him gifts suited for a king.  Now, Joseph gives Jesus another gift suited for a king.  It was only the wealthy who could afford a tomb like this, and usually because it had been a place where all the family members were buried.  Joseph gave Jesus a virgin tomb.  No death had defiled the place, and in this place, they laid Jesus’ body.

They made their preparations, the Romans rolled the stone into place, and the two men were bidden to return to their homes.  What a dark night that would be.  But, praise be to God that this is not the end of the story!  For the day after the Sabbath Mary Magdalene and Mary the wife of Zebedee went to the tomb.  And what did they find?  It was anything but what they expected!

Here in the place of death was life!  Angels from heaven accompanied by all of the splendor of heaven filled this garden with light.  And Jesus had arose!  The garden was transformed not by earthly hands, but by the very power of God!  God was saying even through the change in the garden, “Have hope, for I am in control, and I will be glorified!”

What a great God we have, dear Christian.  This moment here, these words of life that were announced by the angel, are the most important words in the human language.  And this event is the most important event in human history.  Without the death and resurrection of Christ, there can be no hope, but with it, there is hope in abundance.  Friends, rest in that hope, never deviate from it or look another way, for outside of Christ, life is nothing more than darkness and despair—much like Joseph’s garden was before the work of Christ.  Glorify his name with all your life, and trust in his grace even in your darkest times, for it is more than sufficient for you.  Amen.

James’ Garden of Righteousness

(James 3:18)

 

“Blessed are the peacemakers, for they will be called sons of God.” (Matthew 5:9)

 

James reminds us that it is not only the physical gardens in our life that need attention, but the spiritual ones as well.  Even before you begin to plant, you must prepare the soil of your garden.  You must till it, remove rocks, fertilize it, and hoe it before any seeds are sown.  And seeds must be sown if we have any hope of a harvest.

James says that if you want to have a harvest of righteousness in your life and in your church, you first must sow peace.  But peace is not always easy.  Peace takes work and it costs you something.  Peace is not compromise, for in a compromise neither party is happy with the results.  Rather peace is a true resolution of the issues between the parties and a coming together.  Jesus was the greatest peacemaker of all.  He brought peace between a rebellious people and a holy God.  Yet, for this to happen, it cost him his life on the cross.

Sometimes, as we work the soil in preparation for planting, we can get frustrated and tired, yet we do not begrudge the crop when it finally comes in.  Let’s look at the church in the same way.  Sometimes sowing peace in a church or a community costs us sweat, tears, and blood.  Yet, there is a harvest that is awaiting us.  Sometimes God will bless us here in the church, getting to see lives changed and renewed.  But, even if this is not God’s will, there is a time of Glory waiting for us in Heaven and there is a new creation that is coming when the evil will be finally judged and the harvest of righteousness will be more abundant than we can imagine.

 

The New Heavens and Earth

 (Amos 9: 13)

 

With all of the failed attempts to make a garden of peace by the hands of man, it is no surprise that God would choose to remake things in the end.  This is the only way that there would be a guarantee that the results would not be a mess.  I am most encouraged by the picture of the new earth in the close of Amos’ prophesy.  It will be a time where we will work, but the work will prove to be productive beyond our wildest imagination.  Amos tells us that the harvest will be so abundant that those who plow will catch up to those that harvest—that the harvest will be so abundant that those who are reaping will not have time to harvest all of the bounty before it is time to plant again.  It will not be filled with thorns and thistles of frustration and failure, but the hand of God will be on our labors.

But there is a more important difference between our gardens now and God’s final garden; God will be present.  He will once again stroll with man, and we will see his glory.  There, dear Christian is a picture of paradise: being in the presence of God.

         For the LORD comforts Zion;

                        he comforts all her waste places

            and makes her wilderness like Eden,

                        her desert like the garden of the LORD;

             joy and gladness will be found in her,

thanksgiving and the voice of song.

(Isaiah 51:3, ESV)