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SCRIPTURE
Luke 8:15
But the seed on good soil stands for those with a noble and good heart, who hear the word, retain it, and by persevering produce a crop.
WORDS OF HOPE
The United Nations has proclaimed December 5 as World Soil Day. “Our planet’s survival depends on the precious link with soil. Over 95 percent of our food comes from soils. Besides, they supply 15 of the 18 naturally occurring chemical elements essential to plants. However, in the face of climate change and human activity, our soils are being degraded. Erosion disrupts the natural balance, reducing water infiltration and availability for all forms of life, and decreasing the level of vitamins and nutrients in food.”
The above passage from the Gospel of Luke is the final verse from Jesus’s explanation of the parable of the sowers in which he talks about the relationship between seeds, their environment, and their growth and ability to thrive. As Jesus says, the seeds are the Word and the good soil is our hearts. What if we take a portion of the statement above about world soil day and replace the word soil with hearts… “Our planet’s survival depends on the precious link with our hearts…. in the face of “climate” change and human activity, our hearts are being degraded… .” Jesus’s parable is as relevant today as it was two thousand years ago, perhaps more so. Caring for our “interior soil” so that the Word has a healthy place to take root is imperative as we navigate today’s difficult climate.
I saw a meme the other day that said, “Stop walking around with a mouth full of scriptures and a heart full of hate.” I believe that this is exactly what Jesus was talking about in the parable of the sower. Scripture that never makes it from the mouth to the heart is like seeds that rest in dirt rather than fertile soil. Scientifically speaking, soil is a living organism and dirt is not. Thus, we need a heart filled with soil so that the seeds of the word will grow and flourish, rather than one filled only with dirt where they will shrivel and die. Healthy soil does, however, contain some dirt, perhaps a reminder of the mortality of all living things. The following poem sums this up.
Dirt Is Dead
Dirt is dead,
a lifeless mixture
of
sand,
silt,
clay,
rocks,
and pebbles,
an abiotic community.
Dirt is dead.
Soil is alive,
a life-sustaining ecosystem
of
worms,
insects,
fungi,
bacteria,
and dirt-
death-
an integral part of life.
Soil is alive.
And “all we are
is dust
in the wind.”
-Kris Baker
What grows in our hearts determines the nature of the dust that we become.
PRAYER
God, create in me a fertile heart, one that is prepared to receive your word, one that us nourished by the waters of baptism, and one that is sustained by your light. I pray that my heart will yield a bountiful harvest of love for all that you have made. Amen
DEVOTION AUTHOR
Kris Baker
Order of St. Francis and St. Clare
Cathedral of Hope
Proclaiming Christ Through Faith, Hope and Love
5910 Cedar Springs Road | Dallas, TX | 75235
214-351-1901
info@cathedralofhope.com