Sermon 33 - Transplanting
Matthew 13:3b-8
A farmer went out to sow his seed. As he was scattering the seed, some fell along the path, and the birds came and ate it up. Some fell on rocky places, where it did not have much soil. It sprang up quickly, because the soil was shallow. But when the sun came up, the plants were scorched, and they withered because they had no root. Other seed fell among thorns, which grew up and choked the plants. Still other seed fell on good soil, where it produced a crop—a hundred, sixty or thirty times what was sown.
I still don't know why I am gardening. When I was moved to Delta, shortly after Gloria died, and I was gardening five different gardens, my baby brother asked why on Earth I was gardening, since Mom had made sure that we all hated gardening. He was quite right. As the eldest in the family, I bore the brunt of the bullwork necessary when Mom decided that any of her long-neglected gardens needed to be revived. As the only one who had a job in town, I was also the one who had to do the weeding and other maintenance during the summer months. So, yes, I hated gardening. I had no interest in it. I do not have a green thumb. I do not even have a brown thumb, so much as a black thumb. Between us, Gloria and I managed to kill every single living plant that anybody ever gave us. So, I have no idea why I am gardening.
But, after Gloria died, I seemed to have a deep, and highly emotional, need to garden. I don't know the why of that, either. Maybe it is simply as facile as the fact that Gloria is dead, so I need to bring something to life. It seems a stupid reason, but it's about the best that I can come up with.
I still don't know if that's the actual reason.
At any rate, I am gardening. I am not, as mentioned, an experienced, or a good, gardener. However, I did pay attention in biology and botany classes, and, as a scientist, I am a quick study. So I am learning quite rapidly. (Or, as rapidly as I can, when you only get one experiment per year.)
When I started gardening after Gloria died, I didn't realise you didn't grow things from seed. I didn't realise that most people bought tomato, pepper, squash, sunflower, and cucumber plants as small plants, and then transplanted them. Most people who are, actually, avid gardeners, do not grow tomatoes and peppers from seed. Generally speaking, they will buy tomato and pepper plants. These plants have been germinated from seed, but by somebody else. And they have been put into little pots, all ready for you to plant the small plants into your garden. But, of course, the potted plants are even more expensive than seeds are.
I am also cheap. I hate spending money if I don't have to. So I am learning how to grow plants, and garden, spending the least amount of money that I possibly can. And that includes trying to spend as little as possible on buying seeds. I started growing things from seed. I didn't have much luck. I put a lot of seeds into the ground that just died. Eventually I realised it was much more effective to sprout and germinate the seeds, and then transplant the seedlings.
Now one would think that seeds were the very *least* that you needed to buy. However, if you pay attention, you will notice that there are a number of sources of seeds available to you for no money. Or at least, for no extra money, beyond what you are already spending on food.
A lot of our foods are plants. A lot of the plants contain seeds. So, I am growing three types of tomatoes, and a bunch of bell peppers, in various colors, simply because I harvested and dried the seeds that were available in those plants when I bought them for food.
So, I harvested the seeds out of certain food plants, and I dried them out, and stored them, and, taking paper and plastic cups that I have cleaned up off the streets (I *told* you I was cheap), and dirt that I dug up out of the forest, and using plastic clamshell packaging from various baked goods as miniature greenhouses, I have germinated, sprouted, and transplanted a number of tomato and bell pepper plants. I am also now on my third generation of sunflower plants, from a single initial packet of seeds.
All of this is very experimental, and a learning experience. I have learned why most people buy their tomato plants as potted plants. It's a rather tedious process to grow your own. It's tedious to harvest and wash the seeds, and it's tedious to dry the seeds, and it's tedious to store (and label) the seeds, and it's tedious even to set up the mini greenhouse, and keep an eye on it, for when the plants germinate and sprout. And then there is the transplanting process itself. Starting from seeds, you may have to transplant tomato plants up to five different times. Each time you will learn that God really doesn't care about efficiency. Because each time, some of the plants die.
In the first place, not all of the seeds actually germinate and sprout. Then, if they do sprout, you have to carefully take them off the medium that you have been using to keep them moist while they are germinating and sprouting. If, for example, you use paper towel, the roots from the sprout often will have penetrated the paper towel. So, even taking that initial sprout, and trying to put it into a small amount of dirt, to let it get started, means that, simply by pulling it off of, or through, the paper towel, you strip off the root hairs.
Of course the sprout is very tiny, particularly for a tomato seed. So it's entirely possible that, simply by trying to pull the sprout off the paper towel, you will damage the stem, or the leaf, or the root. And, of course, if you do that you kill the plant. But, even if you are able not to do gross damage to the plant, pulling the root away from the paper towel may tear off the root hairs. You probably don't even see the root hairs. They are extremely tiny, and, of course, extremely delicate. But they are also the actual active part of the root system. It is actually the root hairs that start to bring in water and nutrients that the plant needs in order to grow. The root hairs are also, in many cases, the beginnings of new side roots that the plant needs in order to develop an extensive root system, and to stabilize itself in the soil. In either case, tearing off the root hairs is another likely way to kill the plant. You have to be really, really careful when you are transplanting tiny new shoots.
Which brings me to church. We have been given the great commission. We are to go into all the world and preach the gospel. We are to tell people the good news. We are to transplant people from the natural world into God's world.
For some reason, we are not very good at this. We find it embarrassing to go to people and tell them that they are sinners, and that they need a personal relationship with God. We think it makes us look like religious fanatics. Well, of course, we *should* be religious fanatics. That is, in fact, where the word "fan" comes from; like a sports fan. Shouldn't we be God's fans? If we actually have good news, shouldn't we be telling people about it? We have no problem telling people about our favorite hockey team, or restaurants, or TV show. Shouldn't we be willing to tell people about the greatest thing in the universe?
But, okay. I have dealt with that in a different sermon. So we will leave outreach alone for a moment. Will come back to that some other time. (Even though we should be doing it all the time.)
Okay, let's do something a little easier. There are people who have heard that we might have something good going on. Just to skip back to the great commission for a second, someone has famously said that spreading the gospel, telling forth the good news, is not like televangelism. It's more like one beggar telling another beggar where to find bread. So, in some cases, somebody has already heard that we might have some kind of metaphorical bread. Which they might think that they might need. So they wander into our churches.
Now, that's a lot easier isn't it? We don't have to go out and stand on soap boxes on street corners, and be seen as a religious fanatic. The person who has come into our church already knows that we are religious fanatics, so we don't risk anything by acting like religious fanatics.
So here is somebody new in your church. Now, of course, they may simply have wandered in out of the rain. In Port Alberni, that is a non-trivial possibility. Or, they may already be a religious fanatic, possibly even of our particular type. They may just be looking for a church home; church shopping.
We still have a bit of a responsibility. Whoever it is that wandered into our church, they don't necessarily know how we do things. So, as embarrassing and uncomfortable as it may be for us, we may have to actually talk to somebody that we don't already know.
Yes yes, I know. You don't like to do that. You would much rather talk to your friends. I can certainly understand that. Unfortunately, God, in many, *many*, *MANY* places in the Bible, says that you have to welcome strangers. So, you are going to have to talk to them.
Now, of course, you may luck out. It may be that this person was just getting out of the rain, or, it may be that this person just simply wants to know how to join the church. In either case, you can let them go back out into the rain, or you can turn them over to the church secretary, and your job is done. You can go back to talking to your friends.
Unfortunately, sometimes this stranger may be that mythical vagrant wanting that mystical piece of bread. No, I am not talking about an actual homeless person looking for something to eat. I am talking about someone who has a need. A need that God, and fellowship with the church, is going to provide for.
Now you're *really* in trouble.
Now you are faced with the stranger. The foreigner. Someone who doesn't know, or at least has only the most tenuous knowledge of, God and Christ. And, moreover, someone who is probably in distress, in some kind of difficulty, very probably in some kind of pain. Otherwise, why would they have come into the church in the first place? It's not as if the church is known as a welcoming place. Ninety-six percent of the population of Port Alberni knows, very well, that you stay away from any of the churches in Port Alberni. After all, there is a reason why we don't advertise when we meet. We don't want people wandering into our services.
The thing is, this presents us with a bit of a dilemma. This is not simply a sin of *omission*, where we simply have not gone into the highways and the byways and told people the good news. This is a situation where someone has already heard that we might, possibly, have some good news. That there might be something here that they need. And they, rather than we, have reached out. They have come to us. They are begging for that metaphorical bread. And if we don't do anything, it is no longer a sin of omission. It is now a sin of *commission*, if we turn someone in need away.
So we have to talk to them.
Actually, we probably don't need to talk to them. Probably all we have to do is listen to them. Now, yes, I know, once again. Listening is *way* harder than talking. After all, you can talk for hours, with no effort at all. You can trot out Bible verses and cliches by the basketful. You can ramble on, and *on*, and *ON*. Feeding them stuff that they don't need. Because you haven't listened to what it is that they actually *do* need.
So you need to listen. Now, it's not as if you have to take on this person as a lifelong burden. If you listen, if you truly listen, you may find that what they need is better addressed by someone else in the church. If that is the case, then by all means, take the stranger and introduce them to that other person. That more qualified person. That more knowledgeable person. That person who actually has gifts in pastoral care, when you don't. Then you're off the hook, once again.
But, if not, if you can't think of someone else who has a better grasp on the Christian life than you do, who has more skills in addressing distressing personal issues than you do, then you have to keep on listening. If something comes up that you actually do know the answer to, something that will, actually, address this person's pain and distress, in that one instance, then, certainly, mention it. But, of course, that still doesn't get you off the hook.
Because most people in difficulty have more than *one* difficulty. You have to keep listening. You have to listen and find out whether what you gave them did actually address one small part of their pain. If it didn't, you're back to square zero. And even if it did address that part of the difficulty, you have to keep listening and see what *other* sorts of distress to which that person is prey. (And, people in distress are not necessarily accurately self-analytical. So it's work.)
Now, it's possible that your various suggestions do address their distress. If so, well and good. But your job is not over yet.
To find out why, we have to go back to transplanting. As I said, when you are growing something from seed, there are an awful lot of potential problems. Jesus told us about them. A sower went forth to sow. Some seed fell in good soil and created a bountiful harvest. But some seed got snapped away by distractions. Some seed got carried away by feathered distractions. But some seed actually sprang up. It germinated. It's sprouted. It started to put out roots and shoots.
Unfortunately, it was not in particularly good soil. It might have been in thin soil overlaying a rock. It might have been in particularly rocky soil where there wasn't much soil in between the rocks. It might have been in rocky soil where there was no moisture, and no water to promote its growth. Growing plants need water. Even if you're into hydroponics, light and water may be the only thing that they need, but they *definitely* need water. All growing plants need some water. More or less.
So that's where our stranger, who, if you are lucky, and you have been diligent, may be. They are a new Christian. They are starting to grow. They are reaching out for the Water of Life.
You have to make sure they get it.
If they don't get water, believe me, they are going to die. Sometimes it is possible, if they are only *mostly* dead, but not *completely* dead, to give them extra water and bring them back to life. But, for the most part, you have to keep an eye on them. You have to water them everyday. Okay, possibly not every single day, but definitely regularly. And definitely more than once a week.
You have transplanted them. From their old life. Into the new life. But they have been transplanted. They do not have a root system. They haven't been stabilized in whatever soil they are growing in. And the soil may not be perfect. Once again, there may be multiple difficulties. And you have to make sure that those difficulties do not prevent them from getting the water, and the growth, that they need. If they die, from lack of water, and they completely die, there is no bringing them back. They are mulch. They are compost. The fact that they have died, and their decomposition, may warn others of the need to turn to the new life. But, of course, if this new Christian has been telling other people that the church, your church, has been helping them, and then you let them die, the warning will be, don't go to that church.
We in the Christian life, and the church, too often plant seeds ... and then we don't care. If they fall on stony ground, or among weeds, or don't have enough soil, it's not our problem. We need to do more transplanting. Are people not worth more than the grass of the field that is here today and thrown on the fire tomorrow?
Matthew 13:9
Whoever has ears, let them hear.
Sermon - Garden series
Sermon 2 - Broad Beans
https://fibrecookery.blogspot.com/2023/01/sermon-2-broad-beans.html
Sermon 3 - Blackberries
https://fibrecookery.blogspot.com/2023/01/sermon-3-blackberries.html
Sermon 57 - Leaven
https://fibrecookery.blogspot.com/2025/02/sermon-57-leaven.html
https://fibrecookery.blogspot.com/2023/09/sermons.html