Room To Grow

I like to garden.

My garden is nothing fancy;  after all, I live in a condo surrounded by concrete in Southern California – an environment not exactly known for generous plots of land. Plus, I have dogs, so the limited amount of soil I do have doesn’t have a lot of chances of having plants that will last. Yet despite my limitations, I amuse myself with flower pots and planters, trying to make the concrete a little bit more colorful.

However, because I’m an amateur gardener, I’m not the best at estimating what I’ll need when I go shopping for foliage.  I’ll think I have too few things to fill the space, and I’ll come back with too many. Then, I have to try to figure out what to do with the extra. This familiar scene occurred a year or so ago when I got back from my favorite local gardening store with two identical plants, but only had room to plant one.

I thought of this recently because I’ve been learning a bit about horticulture at the college ministry where I serve. Jesus used plants as an illustration to represent His people’s relationship with Him. As we remain in Him, we grow, just as a branch must remain in the vine in order for it to strengthen and bear fruit. This symbolic representation helps us understand what someone must do once they’ve been saved. They must remain with Christ.

However, looking at the plants I overbought, I realized something else about our growth. You see, when I bought my extra plant, I didn’t have a pot to put it in right away. It stayed in the container that the store put it in. Its identical twin, however, got placed in a large tomato plant pot, and begin to take root. It quickly took off, growing several times bigger than the plant that stayed in the smaller, yet manageable container. Both were growing, but one exceeded the growth of the other because it was given room to do so. One was constricted by its surroundings, the other flourished.

Sometimes, our surroundings constrict our growth too. We stay with what’s safe, what’s comfortable and what’s familiar, even when God is calling us to something else. It may even look like we are doing good things; after all, the container that the store placed the plant in wasn’t bad, it just wasn’t right for its future. The plant was content there, but it could only grow so much. It was healthy, but static, unable to reach further heights.

We too, may be tempted to stay with what we know rather than risk what may happened when we are transplanted to another environment. We may look “healthy” to other Christians, but we’re static – not being stretched and strengthened by God.  God may want to use that new place to provide us room to grow.  It may be that only in changing our environment, that He can bring forth a greater harvest of fruit.

Yet change is not easy. So we stay with what we know. Even when God wants to give us room to grow.

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Jailed

We all have times where we feel like we are trapped.

Whether it’s  a painful moment,  a devastating diagnosis, or a prolonged trial, there are seasons where all we want is for God to intervene and change our circumstances. We want Him to reach down and remove us from the hurt.

And sometimes He does.

The Bible is replete with stories of God responding to people’s prayers by changing what’s going on around them.

The early disciples experienced this. . Twice, after being wrongfully incarcerated, God miraculously releases them from prison, first Peter and then Paul.  (Acts 12:6-17; Acts 16:16-24) . Twice, He intervenes to provide  relief.

But that didn’t happen every time.

Later, when Paul was jailed once again, God had him stay there. Not for a little while, but for two years.

Two years of restricted movement, of being a prisoner, of having limited freedoms.

Two years of being removed from his itinerant ministry, not able to visit and encourage the churches that were springing up.

Two years of jail.

Not because he deserved to be locked up, but because some people were jealous of him, and wanted him punished.

And he knew that God could release him. He had done it before. But this time He didn’t.

Yet that time in jail wasn’t wasted. During it, he wrote letters to the churches; letters that are still read today. He provided instruction of what it means to walk and grow in the Lord, even when he couldn’t be there to personally teach them. He encouraged them, even though it must have been so easy for him to get discouraged.

Paul must have realized something that’s important for us to realize too. God doesn’t always work the same way in our lives, but He’s always working.

Sometimes He removes us from the trial, sometimes He allows it to stay, but either way, He’s working through it, so that our circumstance, whether good or bad, brings Him praise.

We might feel trapped, locked up and unable to do anything. Thankfully, we can trust in the One Who is able to do everything. And whether we remain behind our figurative bars, or He works for our release, we can eagerly look forward for how He will use our circumstance – for His purposes… for His glory.

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