Wednesday, April 25, 2007

We will harvest what we plant

By Ed Jordan

I am startled by the trend occurring in American culture, where many people are fixated only on momentary feelings or impulse decisions. Few people seem to think through the implications of a decision or action to evaluate its long-term effects. Many are busy planting seeds, but without ever considering the type of seeds they are planting, or what will grow from those seeds, or what they will do with the plants that grow from their seeds.

The Bible warns us to be careful about the kind of seeds we are planting. “Don’t be misled --- you cannot mock the justice of God. You will always harvest what you plant.” (cf. Galatians 6:7, NLT). We will reap what we sow.

The kind of seeds we plant will produce plants of that same type. We are deluded when we expect a seed we plant to miraculously produce a totally different product than the seed type. The nature of the seed we plant determines the nature of the product it will produce.

This truth is valid in various areas of life. It is true in agriculture and gardening. If we plant corn then corn, and not tomatoes, will grow from those seeds. If we want tomatoes, we have to plant tomato seeds. The plant that grows out of the seed depends upon the nature of the seed that is planted.

This principle applies to what we contribute to relationships as well. If we plant mistrust about others, mistrust grows and we will not be trusted. If we plant trust by trusting others, trust grows and others trust us. If we plant camaraderie, camaraderie grows. If we treat others with disrespect, they will disrespect us. If we respect and honor others, they will likely respect and honor us. If we want our relationships to become all that we dream they can, we must plant quality relational seeds in others first.

Reaping what one sows is also true in developing a successful business. If we want to build loyal clients, we must plant seeds of honesty, generosity, and dependability. Andre Rieu is a musician who has worldwide success, and an incredible fan-base. One reason he is so successful is that he always gives the customers a quality product, and he gives them more than their money’s worth. At his concerts, he will play another half-hour after everyone already thinks that the concert is over.

If we want clients who value the quality of our service or product, we must make sure that our service and/or product has consistent quality, and gives a little more than was expected. Clients return because when they feel that they got their money’s worth, plus a little more. A business grows based upon the seeds that the business plants.

The principle is true in education. If we teach students to analyze and think, some will become analytical thinkers. If we present them with both sides of an issue and train them to be objective in working through the issues, they will become better decision makers. If we plant seeds of self-starting, many will become self-starters.

This ‘harvesting what we plant’ principle is true in our own spiritual lives as well. This Bible verse goes on to say that a person who only plants seeds in his/her physical existence, ignoring God and eternity, will reap in the body a harvest of what was planted. However, those who plant God’s truth and faithfulness in their souls, will obtain a spiritual harvest of what they planted. What we plant in our souls is what will grow there. If you never plant anything in your soul, nothing grows there.

Take a few minutes to evaluate what type of seeds you are planting in the various gardens of your life. Before we plant any seed, we ought to pay serious attention to the type of seed we are planting, and what therefore will grow from it. What seeds are you planting that will grow the values of God in your life and in the lives of others? What kinds of seeds are you planting in your loved ones’ and children’s lives?

We must not fool ourselves: We will get back the same kind of product as the seeds we plant, as certain as a tomato seed always produces a tomato plant.

Planting Time: The timing of seed planting influences its success

By Ed Jordan

Spring is here. Many of us are spending time preparing the soil for planting. There are certain principles that remain consistent in the process of planting seeds. In the next few articles we will look at some of these principles, which are not just true in agriculture. They are also true in our relationships, in our families, in our business dealings, in our education systems, in our nation, in politics… etc., etc.

There are many areas of our lives where we plant seeds that will come up later, and produce a crop. Timeless truth is valid in many areas of life. This is the reason the Christian message is always so relevant. Today, we will focus on the principle regarding the timing of seed planting.

As we begin this series, we must acknowledge that while these principles are timelessly true, there are many factors that can disrupt the natural production cycle of a crop’s harvest. For example, in Idaho you can wait until the proper time to plant your crop and still lose the crop due to a bizarre summer snow or hail storm. But generally there is a time to plant that is safely after the high probability of frost damage. Keep these variables in mind as throughout this series of articles.

Which of us has not enjoyed the warming of spring days, the appearance of blue skies, and experiencing sun-bathed days? I am writing this article during the first week of April, but I am already itching to plant my tomato plants so that the tomatoes have enough time to ripen. You can shake your head and tell me not to do it, but you have the urge, too!

How many times do we fight off that urge, and then finally decide that we have had three weeks of sunshine, so it must be time to plant. We get out in the garden and transplant our little plants into the great outdoors. Two days later we go out to see lifeless stems where there were vibrant little plants. It seems to always be too early to plant our plants here.

The locals talk about waiting until the snowy 7 is gone from the mountain as the guideline for planting. For several years I have waited, and still lost my plants to cold nights. So the timing of our planting, or transplanting, is really crucial to the success we will have in our gardens.

Timing is important in most areas of life. Ecclesiastes 3:1 (HSCB) states: “There is an occasion for everything, and a time for every activity under heaven:” then continues in verse 2 with “A time to give birth and a time to die; a time to plant and a time to uproot (literally ‘uproot what is planted’).”

There is a time that is fairly ideal for each event. There is an ideal time to propose marriage. There is an ideal time for teaching and learning. In parenting, we speak of using daily events that occur as teaching points or times. Events are often the catalyst of a teaching opportunity.
The teaching point concept means that if a child is asking questions about a particular theme, they are in the mood to learn about that theme. Such a time is normally the best time to address it, because they desire to know and are more teachable at that time. However, the content you discuss with them must always be age appropriate for the child.

This does not mean that we don’t teach our children at other times. We do. We are constantly teaching them through our attitudes, our behavior, and our conversations. But there are ideal times as well.

There are ideal times to discuss a problem in your marriage that needs to be worked on. At two in the morning is rarely that time. There is an ideal time to ask the boss for a raise or reassignment.

The best time to ask forgiveness from someone is as near in proximity to the offence as possible. The longer you wait, the more bad feelings and bitterness develop. It is never easy to admit our mistakes, but it is easier to do it sooner, than later.

There is a time to plant values and proper ideals into our children, and a time when it may be too late. There is a time to seek God. God says that “now” is always the ideal time to seek Him. What is it time for you to be doing?

Monday, April 09, 2007

Is Christ Being Formed in You?


I had a very nostalgic experience this month. I went into a farm supply store and saw something I hadn’t seen since my childhood. There on the floor were some feed troughs with lamps attached to them. I had to go look, to see if I was really seeing what I thought it was. As I leaned over to look into the trough, there were the representatives of new life basking in the warmth of the light.

A huge smile came to my face. I instantly was transported hundreds of miles to the south of here, and several decades into the past. One of the wonderful experiences I had each spring was to see my dad bring home a couple of boxes of baby chicks, carrying them in cardboard boxes with straw in the bottom. We would set them up in a place where we could put electric lights near them, shining the heat into the boxes. Their excitement with life, their cheeping, their hunger to grow and live, all were evident in these little chicks.

It is an amazing process, when you think about it. Fertilization occurs, a chick embryo begins to form and develop in the yolk sac. Heat keeps the process going. The yolk sac provides nourishment for the chick’s development within the shell. When the chick is ready to emerge from the shell of the egg, it eats the last of its yolk sac and has food for the transition. It then breaks through the shell, and rests to regain its strength and dry out. Then the little chick begins to develop further in its life cycle, growing quite quickly and developing feathers that can keep it warm without the lamps.

About the same time as I encountered this nostalgic event, I read a little devotional by F.B. Meyer where he commented on Galatians 4:19 (HCSB), which says: “My children, again I am in the pains of childbirth for you until Christ is formed in you.” He said that a person becoming more like Christ follows a process similar to the development of a chick in an egg. When the process begins, the yolk sac is the greater percentage of the substance present there. But as the embryo grows, the chick becomes a greater portion than the yolk. The yolk decreases, while at the same time the embryo is growing.

In a similar way, when a person first receives Christ, our old nature makes up the major content and force of our lives. But the more Christ is formed within us, the more the life of Christ becomes the dominant presence in our lives. Christ being formed in us is a process whereby everyday our lives are becoming more like Christ, and less like our old life.

Paul was concerned that the life of Christ be formed inside every person who becomes a believer in Christ. The Christian life is not just to be ascription to propositional truths about Jesus. The Christian life is inviting Christ to enter our lives and be dynamically formed within us. It is the process of Christ growing inside of a person until Christ is the major substance of our lives, and our former self-centered, destructive life diminishes. The Christian life is allowing our thoughts to be transformed into thinking the kinds of things that Jesus thinks, our values to become the kinds of values that Jesus has. It is being concerned about the kinds of things Jesus is concerned about, and relating to others the way that Jesus relates to us. The Christian life is “Christ living in us,” and this is a process.

Jesus came to give us a new kind of life where He comes inside us to grow and be formed in us. We were like living yolk sacs, full of potential, but in practice just shell-bound blobs. Then the life of Christ begins to grow in us, and our old static life begins to be replaced with the exciting, joy-filled, mobile life of Christ. He begins transforming us to become more and more like Christ both internally, and in our external interactions.

Spring is about new life, new beginnings, and transformation. Is the life of Christ being formed within you? Is Christ or your old self-obsessed life the most dominant influence in your life?

Saturday, February 10, 2007

Inside Out

We live in a time when large numbers of people are living their lives from the outside-in. They are driven and conformed by the things occurring outside of themselves, or by the people around them. For some this is merely perceived as ‘keeping up with the Joneses.” For others it is the total loss of self-identity by allowing other people or things outside of oneself to take the place of one’s own identity.

The following are a few of examples of outside-in living. “If my friends have a snow-machine, then I need one, too.” “If other people have a Hummer, then I should be able to have one, too.” “If my friends wear designer jeans, then I must also.” When a person is living his or her life from the outside-in, then his or her identity is primarily shaped by external admired role models, or circumstances.

This is not just an individual issue, but also an organizational or corporate issue as well. One of the things that continually amazes my family is how almost every mall looks like all other malls. The original mall concept caught on, and every other mall tried to emulate the original one. Another example of corporations being shaped by the external world is that one fast food chain “super-sized” their combination meals, so then all the others “biggie-sized” or “up-sized” theirs. Everyone is mimicking everyone else. Churches today are doing the same thing. They have grabbed on to one or two successful churches and then tried to emulate those in order to become “successful” or “cutting edge” churches. All of these are examples of organizations or corporations living from the outside-in.

Please realize that I am not attempting to “judge” this phenomenon, nor the people or organizations that have gotten caught up in it, but rather I am just trying to make us think about it. I was a teenager in the so-called “hippie” era. When I was in high-school I played drums for numerous bands, wore Beatle-boots and stove-pipe pants. To some degree, I was living my life from the outside-in. The truth is that we are all continually influenced to a very large degree by our external world and cultural environment. The key is to not let external influence cause us to lose our own identity and purpose. Identical clones are rarely appealing, nor needed.

So what is an alternative choice to living outside-in? It is living inside-out. In Romans 12:2 (N.A.S.B) we read: “And do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind, so that you may prove what the will of God is, that which is good and acceptable and perfect.” The word “conformed” means “squeezed into a mold.” Don’t let the external world squeeze you into its shape. If you do, you are living outside-in.

A person who lives inside-out invites Christ into his or her life and allows God to transform him or her from the inside-out. When Christ comes into our lives He changes our basic inner nature. When our basic inner nature changes then our values change. When our values change, our thinking changes. When our values and thinking changes, our behavior changes. Real change begins with inviting Jesus to live within us. Then we begin to change in every area of our lives, and it is a change that comes from within, rather than something being pressured or forced upon us from without.

The influential leaders in society are those who have the internal vision and core values to fulfill their unique purpose in life, rather than those who try to always be like someone else. The corporations that lead the way are those that set an internal course that shapes their organization and influences the outside world by their internal vision. The corporations that are always in second or third place are those that are copycats. They are not implementing their own internal values or unique contributions, but only trying to emulate the ideas or contributions that someone else is already making.

We should learn from others, but we should also learn that we are each unique, as are the people or the companies that we are admiring. We cannot be them, and they cannot be us. If we are always trying to be someone else, instead of being who we alone can be, then the world will miss out on the contribution that we alone could have made. We lose, and the world loses.

Do you live outside-in, or inside-out?

Life-Enriching Investment Principles

The beginning of a new year brings the opportunity to set a new direction for our lives. In this article we will look at five investment principles from Ecclesiastes 11:1-6 which have application in numerous areas of our lives. However, our focus in this article is how these principles can bring dividends in our relationships.

Ecclesiastes was written by Solomon, renown as one of the wisest people to have ever lived. His first principle in verse 1 is to “cast your bread on the surface of the waters for you will find it after many days” (NASB). This is the principle of giving or investing. Some people think that the image is of literally casting bread onto a lake or sea, and receiving bread from other sources in return. Others see it as a figurative economic image of sending your goods to market on a ship, and receiving compensation from them when the ship returns. The principle is the same, either way. If money is kept in a sack in the house and not used, it will not grow nor bring returns. If a person has talents, but never uses them to benefit others, those talents never bring any results. If we wish to impact other people, we must take some risk and invest something of ourselves into them.

Solomon also states that we should diversify our investments. In verse 2 he says, “divide your portion to seven, or even to eight, for you do not know what misfortune may occur on the earth.” Financial planners lead people to invest some resources in stocks, some in bonds, some in savings, etc., so that if one sector of the economy falters, another might be doing well.

Diversification is a solid principle in most areas of our lives. People who only have one trusted friend are severely devastated should that person die, or leave. People with only one hobby find their life empty if something prohibits participation in that hobby. We need to invest our resources in more than one type of program or product, or more than one trainee or disciple, for if one fails, others may succeed. An old saying regarding diversification is “do not put all your eggs into one basket.”

A third principle is that actions bring consequences (see vs. 3). If the clouds are full, rain will fall; once a tree has been cut down, there it remains. So it is important to plan with a view towards consequences. It takes accumulation of water droplets into clouds in order for the clouds to later release those droplets onto our crops. If we never invest ourselves into others, then it will be unlikely that they will be there for us when we need them.

The second aspect of this verse is not to cry over spilt milk or fallen trees. Once a tree has fallen towards the North, it is ridiculous to spend the rest of your life bemoaning that fact, or wishing it had fallen towards the South. Go on to another tree or a new challenge. Don’t let past failures ruin your future.

Solomon’s fourth principle is: don’t let imperfect circumstances prevent you from participating (see verse 4). Life is not perfect. If a person waits for totally perfect conditions before planting the crops, the crops will never get planted. Some people will use any excuse not to get started on something. We once knew a guy who was in his early 40’s and still single. He could never find a girl “perfect enough” for him. One time he thought he had found her, but then later broke it off. When asked why, he replied: “I finally realized that her nose was too big.” I have not heard from the fellow in many years, but the last time I saw him, he was still single. Waiting for a literally “perfect” person leaves you alone and single; waiting for a perfect job before taking employment leaves you unemployed. Waiting for the perfect “anything” will leave you with perfectly nothing.

The last principle is to always be active investing your life. Invest in the morning and in the evening (verse 6). You never know which one will produce a return. I know a salesman who is selling everywhere he goes. He doesn’t just talk to those who have an appointment with him; he is planting “sales” seeds all the time. Invest your life in all kinds of people. You never know when they will in turn bless your life. I hope that these principles stimulate wise investment of your life in 2007.

The Saga of Humpty Dumpty

Humpty Dumpty was a Mother Goose nursery rhyme published in 1810. Maybe it is time for all of us to revisit the point of that little jingle. Humpty was an anthropomorphized egg, who sat on a wall, had a great fall, and couldn’t be put back together at all. Were these nursery rhymes just little clever poems to occupy a child’s mind, or were they subtle ways to give some wise instruction to our children?

Humpty Dumpty made the point that if a personified egg sits on a wall, and falls off the wall, it will be smashed into hundreds of pieces and no one will be able to put the egg back together again. The story was a call for foresight, because re-assembling an egg is a lot more difficult than preventing its downfall would have been. It was a way of saying that it is a lot better to avoid some situations rather than to try to restore a life after it gets crushed by those situations.

This is an important bit of advice for all of us today. It is easier to spend time building and maintaining our relationships, than it is to repair them after we have neglected them so severely. It is better to avoid destructive habits, than it is to try to deal with all the destructive ramifications that flow from participation in destructive things. It is easier to be nice, than humiliating ourselves when we treat others poorly, and then having to further humiliate ourselves by admitting that we had been jerks, and need to ask for forgiveness.

It is easier to study diligently now, than to flunk out and later have to try to overcome years of bad grades and habits. It is better to choose our friends wisely and be less popular, than to run with the wrong crowd and end up ruining our lives and reputations for years to come. It is better to say “no” to an affair, than to partake in the affair and lose the family we love.

It is easier to prevent problems, than it is to correct the aftermath of our debacles. So many of us get into trouble by jumping into some situation, or off of some wall, without even thinking through the ramifications of such an action. If we would think through the natural consequences of making this or that decision, before we make the decision, we would save others and ourselves a whole lot of grief. If Humpty had thought through the risk of a semi-round object’s ability to remain sitting on a wall, the odds are he would not have done so at all.

In the book of Micah in the Old Testament, the people were asking what it was they could do to please God. What could they do to remedy their sins? The answer is similar to what we have been discussing. “No, O people, the LORD has told you what is good, and this is what He requires of you: to do what is right, to love mercy, and to walk humbly with your God” (cf. Micah 6:8 NLT).

God’s reply was that it is a lot better to not sin to start with, than to try to correct the consequences of our sins. The problem is not that we do not know what is good to do, it is that we do not choose to do the good! It is a lot wiser to not decimate your life through destructive decisions, than to have to rebuild your life after you demolish it.

So, if we want to save ourselves a lot of grief, we are instructed to do in the beginning that which we know is good or right. We are to be merciful in our relationships with others, and to live day by day in a humble relationship with God. To walk with God is to relate to God and dialogue with God all through the day. It is to talk to God, listen to God, and do what God tells us is the right thing to do in any particular situation we find ourselves in. God most clearly speaks to us through the Bible.

The more problems we prevent by wise living, the fewer times we will need to use costly repair kits or restoration provisions. However, in the New Testament we learn that when we do fall off of the wall, we have a Savior in Jesus, who really can put us back together again. It is not a painless process, but it is now a possible one!

I encourage you to walk with God, rather than roll off the wall.