Sunday, July 24, 2011

Roots in the Rocks

“Some fell on stony ground, where it did not have much earth; and immediately it sprang up because it had no depth of earth. But when the sun was up it was scorched, and because it had no root it withered away. . . . These likewise are the ones . . . who, when they hear the word, immediately receive it with gladness; and they have no root in themselves, and so endure only for a time. Afterward when tribulation or persecution arises for the word’s sake, immediately they stumble.” (Mark 4:5, 6, 16, 17)

I live in the South and have lived in the South practically all of my life. I find it humorous to hear the comments each year: “It’s never been this hot before!” “I can’t believe how dry it is!” “It’s gotten a lot hotter earlier this year”—and on and on the complaints and seeming amazement roll out every time there is a gathering. But, as I said, I have lived in the South all of my life, and it always gets hot, pretty much from April to October, and we almost always have a drought (there have been exceptions) or at least what can be called a “dry season.” Grass stays green in your lawn if you water, but brown and yellow can generally be expected to take over at some point if you don’t. It has always been that way and always will be, “global warming” or not.

I have lived in the world all of my life too (as we all have, of course), and there is another certainty I have found: trouble comes to everyone, and persecution comes to all who love God’s Word enough to live by it (2 Timothy 3:12). Christ says in this passage there are “rainy-day Christians” who find it easy to be Christians when things are going well for them, when it is easy to flower and blossom and look promising. But when summer comes, and the sun gets to glaring, and the long haul of 100˚-days sets in—when sickness takes hold, relationships get tough, or the Christian thing to do goes contra “cool”—where is their faith and hope and love now? It has found no root, Christ says, in the stony soil of their hearts but is far more like the pretty spring wildflower-weeds that spring up today and wither tomorrow.

A well-balanced soil makes for not only happy but healthy plants. All green on top but no root results in a flashy but short show. Hearing the Word of God, believing it, committing to it, obeying it, and living according to it in every nook and cranny of life, come hell or high water and through thick and thin, means growing the deep roots that will survive any trouble/trial/tribulation or the sure persecution that comes from loving the Word more than the world. Survive, not “make easy.” Trouble and persecution by definition exclude “easy.” But while the heat of life destroys some, it is life and even joy to others—the difference being the roots that can reach the water of the Word of God through faith, hope, and obedience.

“Lord God, we give You thanks for the gift of Your Word, the sound of Your voice that has come to our ears. We pray our thanks would not be short-lived or fair-weather only but that we would love and cherish Your Word always, when the pressure is on as well as off. Help us to endure when all the world seems against us. Help us to rely upon You, trust in Your promises, hope in Your grace and mercy, when life is hot and dry and troublesome or mundane. Keep us from stumbling, dear God, and grant to us the strong roots of trees that bear fruit, whose leaves do not wither, because their delight and every thought is grounded in the Word of God. So we pray in Christ’s name. Amen.”

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