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From csmonitor.com
Reprinted from The Christian Science Monitor: Biblical gardening tools
When people get together to accomplish something for their community—setting up a tutoring program, installing plants or bike racks, raising money for the library—there is sometimes a sense that everything depends on the efforts of a few clear-eyed, hardworking individuals. That way of thinking can lead to a personal sense of responsibility, clashing and bruised egos, and community activism burnout.
The Apostle Paul wrote to the communities of faith about how they could best work together toward their goals without “quarreling, jealousy, bad temper, rivalry, factions, party-spirit, envy . . . and things like that” (Galatians 5:20, 21, J.B. Phillips), conditions called “ugly parodies of community” in The Message.
Instead of depending on their own insights and energy, Paul urged the Galatians to be led by Spirit, to “live your whole life in the Spirit” (5:16, J.B. Phillips), to recognize only the animating, energizing power of Spirit in every activity.
One way to step back from a personal sense of our role in a community activity—from feeling pride about our own contributions, or resentment that they are not being properly appreciated—is to think about what God is doing. That really helped me when I was developing a community garden at a public housing project.
At first there was a lot of understandable resistance—the property supervisor was not interested in increased responsibilities, most of the residents had never gardened before and either were not interested or had unrealistic expectations (gardening can take a lot of time and be dirty!), and everyone worried that the children would destroy what was planted.
It was actually the children who made the community garden happen.
I was able to stick with it by thinking about what God was doing there. I thought of God in terms of synonyms identified by Mary Baker Eddy in Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures (p. 587). She defined God as divine Principle, Mind, Life, and Love, among other terms. It helped to think of the activity of each of these terms: Principle as a divine law providing justice—including access to fresh food—for everyone; Mind outlining the best way to move forward; Spirit, or Life, invigorating the project; and so on.
It was actually the children who made it happen, helping to measure the spaces, pulling their families into the project. Where there had been a concrete terrace (a clothes-drying area), raised beds were built and a lush garden has bloomed with vegetable plots for several families, and families who didn’t know each other before now care for each other’s plants—and children.
Paul taught that the result of living in the Spirit provides what a community really needs to move forward together: “love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, generosity, fidelity, tolerance and self-control (Galatians 5:22, 23, J.B. Phillips). Or as interpreted in The Message: “What happens when we live God’s way? He brings gifts into our lives, much the same way that fruit appears in an orchard—things like affection for others, exuberance about life, serenity. We develop a willingness to stick with things, a sense of compassion in the heart, and a conviction that a basic holiness permeates things and people.”
August 20, 2012 issue
View Issue-
Letters
Joy V. Smith, H. Wyeth, Ad Walter Knoepfel, Jackie Mosk, Lisa Whitney, Claire Lackey
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A nurturing shepherd
Jeff Ward-Bailey, Staff Editor
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Our pastor: the foundation for Christian healing
Christine J. Driessen
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Church services heal
George Reed
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Dancing again
Joyce Posik
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When the pastor calmed me
Laura Remmerde
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Taking direction from God
Gil Bird
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Make way for the Christ
Sue Brightman
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Oneness
Susan Vreeland
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In heaven on earth
Don Houge
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Quote quandary
Maija Baldauf
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A pamphlet that changed my life
Elizabeth Harned
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'The rock that is higher than I'
Richard Requarth
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Purifying prayer for our oceans
Valorie Miller
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Living the commands of Jesus
Abby Fuller
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Give a 'cup of cold water'
Anna Lisa Kronman
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Hymns heal
Margaret Penfield
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Healed of hepatitis
Samuela Orth-Moore with contributions from David Orth-Moore
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The cyst lost its reality in my consciousness
Maritza Añez
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Sparks, embers, and fire
The Editors