I have often wondered about the parables of Jesus. Most of us church going folk have heard them so often that they've lost their power to shock or surprise. Most of us forget (or have never been taught) how shockingly bizarre they would have seemed when people first heard them.
As we were offloading pumpkins, I thought about what insight the pumpkins, the patch, and our work together might offer us. Let me play.
The Kingdom of God is like a patch of pumpkins that have been separated from the true vine. But as they gather together, they can remember what life was like before the separation. They can act as if they are still connected to the life giving vine and the earth--and in doing so, they will eventually find the true vine again.
The Kingdom of God is like a patch of pumpkins. They see themselves as vastly different one from another, and yet they are more alike than they know.
The Kingdom of God is like a patch of pumpkins: some are big, some are small, some are deep orange, some are white, and some are shades in between. God delights in this variety, and we should too.
What does the Kingdom of God look like? A small church that comes together to take pumpkins off a truck. Some of the members scramble on the truck to get the pumpkins from the back to the front. Others walk slowly with pumpkins in their hands. Those who can't walk create a line and hand pumpkins one to another. Those who can't stand will help with sales.
The Kingdom of God is like a pumpkin. It can be made into a sweet pie or a savory soup. It binds disparate ingredients together into a whole. It grows slowly but surely, in environments that would kill less sturdy plants--and thus, a patch of pumpkins can sustain a tribe in a harsh climate.
The Kingdom of God can be used in many ways: the purely decorative gourd or ingested from the skin to the seeds. The Kingdom of God can provide the nutrients and fiber to keep our bodies full. The Kingdom of God can soothe our aesthetic yearnings. The Kingdom of God nourishes us in ways we didn't know we needed.
thinking too hard
4 years ago
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