The patio was encircled by flowerbeds and ivy covered
walls. All of it was quite manicured and
beautiful. All of it, that is, except
for this one three foot tall weed that stood prominently in a bed of ground
cover. I could not help but wonder why
someone had not pulled it before.
Now to be fair, it looked less like a weed, as you might imagine a weed, and more like a small tree that had found its way there by seed or by shoot. I have to imagine, because the leaves were so much more pleasant than your average dandelion, that when it first appeared the gardener must have thought it to be a desirable plant and decided to leave it there.
Some time, soon after, this plant began to grow much taller
than the plants that surrounded it. At
some point it became quite apparent, whether it is a weed, tree, or some
other plant my lack of horticultural prowess prevents me from identifying, this
plant did not belong here.
Why is it that the gardener did not pull it up at that
point?
My guess, by then he had become so used to seeing it, he no
longer recognized it for what it is, a weed.
This can be a very destructive oversight. A friend of mine told me of a tree that took
root in his neighbor’s driveway. It burrowed
its root into a crack in the side walk, made its way under the slab, and under
the cinder-block wall. How long it was
there I do not know, but I have been in his back yard and have seen how the
root of that misplaced tree has caused the block wall to heave, cracking and distorting
it.
I wondered how long it will take for this weed of a tree to crack the patio I was sitting on. Maybe it will never get to that point, but my guess is that it already has put down enough roots that it is going to be quite difficult to remove. Even when it is removed, those roots may put up shoots elsewhere in the landscape of that hotel, causing the gardener to take time to attempt to eradicate this weed of a tree for years to come.
If only the gardener would have pulled the weed when it
first took root and sprouted.
It is the same with the weeds in our life. Whether it is a bad habit, laziness or sin it
is so much easier to eradicate it when it first appears than to get rid of it
when it has had time to grow and send out its roots.
Trying to pull it out after it has taken root often only
causes it to spread and sprout up somewhere else in our lives, leaving us
feeling as it we will never be fully rid of it.
If we give up, and just let it grow we cannot predict the
damage it will eventually cause. Rather
than pulling a weed, we may find ourselves having to rebuild the walls of our
life.
A week later I spent some time at a friend’s house in Gig
Harbor, Washington. They live in a
neighborhood where people take their gardening seriously. It is a very beautiful neighborhood. Each day my friend goes out to the garden to
pull weeds. He does not spend hours and
hours there, but each day he takes a few minutes to tend to part of the garden,
removing any plant that has sprouted that is not supposed to be there. He said it is so much easier to take a little
bit of time each day than it is to wait until the weeds have had time to take
over.
Because of his diligence, the weeds never have the
opportunity to cause the kind of damage that is possible if they were left to
grow.
How is your life’s garden?
Do you pull up the weeds as soon as they appear, or do you give them
time to spread their roots and become invasive?
What damage can you see from the weeds that have been left to grow? What has been the cost?
It is never too late to pull up a weed. Even if has spread, now is the time to begin
to remove it from the fertile soil of your life.
One of the best ways I know of to begin the process is to
first find a trusted friend and tell them about it. It should be someone who is able to speak
truth to you, and is able to do it in love. It should
be someone who is not judgmental, but able, because they have done a bit of
weeding in their own life, to sympathize with your weed problem.
The next move is to recognize that not all weeds can be
removed by our own effort. We need
supernatural help, and being willing to acknowledge the presence of the weed to
God and ask him for help is the beginning of eradicating a weed from your life.
Taking time to talk to God and to others about the weeds in
our life early and often is a bit like my friend who goes out daily to weed a
small part of his flowerbeds. It keeps
the weeds from becoming invasive and destructive.
It is also so much easier than waiting until it is all overgrown.
It is also so much easier than waiting until it is all overgrown.
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