Maybe I didn't notice it before, but I continue to be amused
at the folks, some of them young kids, some adults, or maybe migrant workers
who walk the rows of beans hoeing out the weeds that seem to grow taller and
more quickly than the beans planted in fields. I noticed orange and yellow
flags that seem to be at the end of some of the rows and conclude that maybe
that is an indication of where to begin weeding or where a day’s worked ended.
I don’t know, but I am amused by the concept of weeding and hoeing the beans
row by row.
In other agrarians regions I've lived in before I have not
seen throngs of people going through the bean fields cutting out the weeds and
so this is a new concept for me. I guess in the communities I have lived, the
farmers choose to spray the weeds growing in the bean fields rather than to
send workers out to manually remove the weeds from the beans.
As I see this and also notice the weeds high and above the
golden wheat, I am reminded of a parable that is found in Matthew – the Parable
of the weeds among the wheat. Perhaps you will remember this. It is said that a
farmer spread good seed in a field, but as the seeds germinated, some of the
servants noticed that among the good seed there seemed to be many weeds. The
servant questioned the master, ‘did we not sow good seed?’ The master agreed
that it was good seed, but somewhere along the way, the ‘evil one’ sowed weeds
among the wheat. The servant asks, ‘do you want us to go out in the field and
pull the weeds so that there can be a greater harvest? The master responded,
‘No for in gathering the weeds you would uproot the wheat along with them. Let
both of them grow together until the harvest and then we will know the weeds
from the grain and then we will gather up the weeds, bind them, throw them into
the fire, and harvest the good grain.”
This parable, the golden wheat, the throng of workers
walking the fields with hoes in hand and weeding the bean rows got me thinking
about the life we have known and the life we long to see. The
agricultural parables throughout the Christian gospels reflect two realities, the reality
of the human condition or an alternative reality that imagines a world – a
field free of the weeds that compromise the dignity and integrity of all of God’s
Creation.
Our human condition cannot help but have a few weeds that
darken the shinier side of living and loving. Where are the weeds that bring
suffering in our world? The weeds of injustice still find its way into the most
progressive of our communities. A rural congregation, seemingly hard working
and stable still feeds 60 plus families each week from their pantry. The Supreme Court votes against affirmative
action and voting reforms and large corporations receive a multitude of tax
breaks and a few very wealthy people can control Washington with their billions
of dollars. The weeds of injustice are still painfully present.
![]() |
| The Harvest is Plentiful, but the laborers are few |
What about the evasive weeds of broken relationships that
clutter your life? Maybe the weeds of abuse and neglect have been your
experience. Have the weeds of addiction
and personal suffering compromised the quality and wholeness of your life? The
weeds of life do get in the way of experiencing a life that is really worth
living and from time to time, we need to do some hoeing. Maybe it’s time to
walk the bean fields and do some hoeing. Take some time to gather up the weeds, bind
them in bundles to be burned and begin to free your life from the weeds that
minimize the harvest. Just where are the weeds in the fields today? Is it time
to do some digging and free the wheat from the weeds? When God calls us into the field to hoe, just where will you begin?

No comments:
Post a Comment