An installment of Planet Earth on the Discovery Channel dealt with deserts and how life is sustained in those conditions. Mention was made of rainfall in mountains many miles away that ran downhill and washed through a flat area of the desert in a flash flood manner. The water was a once or twice a year occurrence, and the impact was phenomenal. The narrator, actress Sigourney Weaver, said that seeds dormant for thirty years sprouted.
I don’t know much about deserts. My only experience of one was driving across the Mojave Desert from Arizona into California and back a couple of years ago. With apologies to folks from desert areas, it’s not my cup of tea. Seeds laying around for a generation or more must get tossed around a good bit by wind, reptiles and perhaps in other ways. I wasn’t aware that a seed could still explode into life after that many years.
Jesus told the Parable of the Sower, who went about throwing seeds, seemingly in every direction and without much planning or precision. Some of the seeds he flipped around landed on the beaten path, some scattered throughout weeds and shallow soil, and some actually landed on good soil. The Sower apparently didn’t feel the need to be sparing in his actions. It appears to me he simply reached into his bag, grabbed a handful of seeds and flung ‘em all around.
Often when we read or hear that story, we reflect on which seeds we might be, i.e., the quality or character of our faith. Is our faith like the seeds on the rocky ground? Is our faith well-rooted in rich soil?
Maybe sometime we should think about identifying with the Sower, the one who tosses out the seeds. Where, to whom, and how do we witness to the faith? Are we discriminating in our dispersal of seeds? Do we decide that there is no point in wasting our time on some people, or that they are beyond hope or possibility? Are we stingy with the seeds?
Jesus seems to say – and the experience of the seeds in the desert on Planet Earth bear him out – “Just grab as many as you can and let ‘em fly! It’s not up to you where and when they sprout. But nothing will happen if you keep them in a closed container in the shed.”
