June 13, 2021 " SCATTER THEN WATCH" Rev. Dal McCrindleFor those of us living on the edge of the rain forests ofthe Pacific Coast, the symbols and images of planting andscattering may not be very familiar in our everyday experienceand yet, many people who live in the greater Vancouver areahave come from elsewhere; many having their origins on theexpansive prairies.For the farmers of Jesus; day, God was often describedas the heavenly FARMER who planted and cared for thegarden of earth. At the end of the growing time, God wouldharvest the crop and gather in the fruits of the season. Thesecond creation story found at Genesis 2:4 was very muchinfluenced by an agricultural society where God's creativity isdescribed in the process of creating a perfect garden! Inanother place, Jesus spoke about the wheat and the weedsand the difficult task of separating them. At that harvest, saysJesus, the weeds will be gathered up and thrown into a fire;the chaff, that useless outer part of the grain will be separatedoff and discarded. All of these images could come to mindwhen we think of God as a heavenly farmer or when we thinkof productive or unproductive crops.Reflecting on these themes has uplifted and helpedcountless people see that their work in God's garden-place isimportant, no matter how small, or how seeminglyinsignificant.Most people have been shaken by life's disasters atsome point in their lives, the crises and issues which faceeveryone. On occasion, we may have been noticeably beatendown. It turns out that our faith had not been the tower ofstrength we once thought it might be: we faltered, retreated,withdrew. Possibly, our thoughts were drawn to the image ofthe mustard seed and we mustered a little hope and thendreamed a little, of even moving mountains.Around us, throughout our world-garden, there is war,rumor of war; killing, hostage-taking, abuse, intrigue anddeception; there is organized crime while corruption aboundsin both high and low places. The quietness and relative safetyof our neighbourhoods have been transformed into battle-zones between warring gangs. Some, like those first disciplesand early converts might even have hoped for the end ofeverything, the second and last coming when God would usherin a new world-order. Many, like us, sat and waited for God toact, while others lost their faith and were dismayed, for thisJesus, who said he would come again, with power and withmight...did not come! Where was his kingdom? Where was theMaster-Gardener who promised to sweep away the tares andthe weeds? O God, give us that mustard-seed faith!The Apostle Paul, even though he sometimes falteredthroughout his journey, spoke to our disbelief and impatience.We are always of good courage,” he says, “...for we walk byfaith, not by sight...the old has passed away, and the new hascome."You would think that after several hundred years, we ofthe church might begin to live this Christian faith; to have thismustard-seed hope and faith; to trust in our heavenlygardener, and to walk in the land of the living, with eyes whichsee what others cannot or refuse to see; to risk when othershave lost any desire or passion for risking; to have courageand vision when assaulted by fear and defeat. But no, so justas Paul and his colleagues needed to be uplifted andencouraged; we too, in this time, in this place, need to hearagain the basic tenets of our faith.We are encouraged to see what Jesus saw. We need topenetrate the illusions and false claims of human systems andthen see, speak and act according to God's vision and system;to stand with those who are poor, widowed, orphaned, abusedor oppressed; to seek justice, resisting evil; and to trust theultimate outcome to God.As the school year comes to a close, the summerholidays approach, the pandemic, maybe under control and mytime as your minister nears its end, new one just around thecorner; another cycle of life is complete. With each passingseed-time and harvest the cadence of life moves and oftenbefore moving into another cycle it is good to look backwardfrom whence we have come and THEN to look forward toanticipate where we might be going. It is hard not to try toassess the debits and credits of our life together; that whichhas been good and that which has not been so; to highlightour productivity; confess our failures; compare ourshortcomings or accomplishments against those of otherperiods; compare our goals and dreams to those of othertimes. Reflection and comparison may be worthwhile, but ourMaybe to water, fertilize and nurture that which someone else planted a whileago.Many years ago, when I was President of BCConference, I visited the barrios and refugee camps of Mexicoas part of a United Church exposure and observation of ThirdWorld living. I was overcome by the terrible conditions and thedesperate need for social, political and economic reform. Likeother novice rescuers, I looked for immediate solutions: whatcould affect change right away? What would solve their pitifulexistence? Then we listened to the people and heard that theyhad learned over the centuries to have patience; to be faithfulin loving, in caring, in serving, for the over-all planning of thegarden was not theirs to do but was God's. This was notindicative of their laziness nor was it to absolve any frompersonal culpability or responsibility, but a reflection of theirfaith that God would make sure that the harvest comes.Instead of trying to turn the wheel of change all the wayaround, they believed that their faithful living resulted inmoving that great wheel of change one miniscule cog at a time.In God’s time, the harvest would come.It is hard for we super achievers to plant and then tohave faith that someone else might water, cultivate and prunewhile still others will reap the harvest of our labour, but thefaith of Jesus is that the harvest will come. Even for those,who have waited so long, the harvest will come. Even as theworld seems hell-bent for destruction, the harvest will come.Even if what I or you do is small, the harvest will come. Wehave to live and plant one-day-at-a-time; one-step-at-a-time,knowing that the over-all care of this garden belongs toanother.For the people of Jesus time, a symbol for God'skingdom or God's reign was of a very large tree whichprovided shelter, protection and security for all peoples. In themiddle East, the mustard bush grows to about 8-10 feet inheight, but is still large enough for birds to build their nests init. And it begins from a relatively small seed. And once seeded,grows almost uncontrollably, taking over vast areas offarmland. My work, your work, the faithful work of those wholive in large or small places is the work of kingdom-building;but we are not the builders, nor are we the ones who give life;nor are we the ones who draw the plans. We are those whofaithfully plant, dig, fertilize and nurture for the harvest willcome.When tempted to despair or when all patience hasvanished and hope is gone, we are called to remember thewords of Jesus, “For the harvest will come.” We are to livewherever we are, no matter what happens with harvest-faith,the symbol of God's overriding providence. During the monthswhich follow Easter, Pentecost and Ascension, the colour forthe church season is green; the colour of growth, of hope, ofnew life. For in Jesus Christ, we have gained power to live withhope, to work with courage, and to endure and grow whenpushed down.God's reign may seem slow in coming, slow in growing,but God's kingdom is here, right now: from the smallest deed,from the smallest word, from the smallest gesture. When wewelcome any who wish to speak of life or death; when wemake available our church building to the community; whenwe are open to people marrying here, or welcome families togrieve their dead here; when we provide service to others aswell as ourselves, in all of these and many other things, weplant seeds; seeds which we may water and others will water.We may see growth or maybe not. We might be terriblysurprised as to what grows! Ours is to plant and to gardenwhenever and wherever we can.If we, with our scientific, rational minds can believe thata hard and dormant seed can become a soft and fragrantflower, then we can even believe that God's reign will growhere upon the earth, in this very place. At least that’s the way Isee it!Thanks be to God!
St. David's United Church, West Vancouver