LogoLogo
Logo
Clergy
Vesrty/Parish Leaders
Ministries
Sermons Archive
Calendar of Events
Connect with Us
Via Media
e-documentation
Stained Glass Windows
St. Paul the Hermit


Return Home

Image
 
Header
TitleTitleTitle  


Please enter your E-mail address below and click "Send" to email this sermon.

March 26, 2004 - Lent 3C

Like most of you, I had a couple of careers. Jobs that were challenging and exciting, successful and had good benefits. I spent most of my adult life in these jobs. But I never felt fufilled, satisfied or that my gifts were being used. I felt that something was missing. That is, until I changed my life and answered the call to ministry. I took a chance, and with God's help found fulfillment with my life...albeit not without it's trials and disappointments, but also the glory and grace of the Almighty. We always get another chance.

So here was a man with a fig tree in the middle of his vineyard. Now the obvious reason for his having such a tree was that he wanted to enjoy the fruit; a fig tree is certainly not something beautiful to look at. Upon coming to the vineyard, he found that the tree was totally lacking fruit. So the man approached his hired vinedresser and told him to cut it down. The owner is not acting impulsively. Now here's another silly rule from Leviticus (19:23) makes it clear that no one was allowed to eat the fruit of a tree during the first three years after it was planted, so this particular fig tree must have been at least six years old because the owner had been seeking the fruit for three years. There had been an ample period of time for it to bear fruit, but it didn't and now never would. So the only thing to do was to cut it down. After all, it was only taking up space that could be more productive, and it was depriving the other plants of their needed nourishment. The vinedresser offers a suggestion. He would like the owner to postpone having the tree cut down for one more year. During that time, the vinedresser would pamper it; give it special attention, which would be particularly unusual since fig trees are really quite undemanding and require very little care. Every step will be taken to promote the production of fruit. Then, if there is fruit, everything is fine. If not, out it goes.The parable comes to an end. Jesus does not bother to explain it further. We are led to believe that the owner goes along with the plan and that the fig tree is placed on one-year probation; it is given a chance to turn over a new leaf as it were. Even the outcome is not discussed, nor is it important. The importance lies in the facts surrounding the fig tree itself: its condition, its probationary period, and its possible demise. We just have the parable.

In the Near East, fig trees tend to produce their crops at a specific time of the year, so it is easy to determine whether they are producing or not. Growth in our lives is equally important. It is appropriate for us on occasion to examine our lives and to see whether or not we are indeed bearing fruit being productive. For Christians Lent is this time. It is a time for us to admit that rather than looking to the Lord for our spiritual nourishment, we look to ourselves, try to put our trust in our own growth, and go nowhere. Is my life what it should be? Are there areas that I'm holding on to rather than turning them over to the care of Jesus? Are my priorities in order? Understanding that who I am today affects who I will be tomorrow, if my life continues along the same way that it is now going, if I continue to do the same things, where will I be one year, five years, even ten years from today? Is my life fruitful and productive or have I stopped growing? Am I cold, hard, unproductive, a Christian in name but certainly not in spirit? Perhaps on an even more basic level, am I a Christian at all, or have I either been running or playing games? It's time to ask the hard questions.Just as the fig tree was barren, we sometimes are led to see that our own lives aren't overly fruitful either. As the fig tree is about to be cut down, we too feel lost and without hope. "If only I would have done things differently." "If only I would have committed that area, that problem to the Lord." "If only I would have trusted my faith more." "If only I would have done this or done that." "If only, if only, if only."In reality, we have no better time then now to change our lives. We can't bring back wasted opportunities. But you know one thing this parable tells us? It says, we can change. Jesus will tend us, enrich us and watch out for us. For, just as the vinedresser interrupted the land owner, so too the Son of God is pleading our case at the very throne of grace, even as the Holy Spirit nudges each of our hearts, saying, " There is still time. Today is another day. God is a God of grace; God wants our lives to be fruitful and filled with hope." Indeed there is. For in the light of repentance, we can look to a gracious God for help. Arriving at an awareness of our own shortcomings or lack of fruitfulness is not intended to leave us defeated and in despair, but rather to inspire us to leave that behind and to reach out so that we might be fruitful today and tomorrow. As long as we have breath, we can be changed. We have another chance. And the Spirit of God has been given to nurture our very lives.Yet there's an ominous side to the parable as well that we don't like to think about. How long will that chance last? For the fig tree, it lasted one additional year. For us? Who knows. A decade? A year? A month? A week? For some, maybe only a day. One thing is certain. The grace period comes to an end. "If it bears fruit next year, fine! If not, then cut it down." God is a god of grace and mercy, but there are only so many tomorrows. While we might not yet be out of time, we must be careful, for we really do not have all the time in the world.What a hopeful parable this is. What looks like a dread of judgment, "Cut it down," turns out to be an invitation to repentance, "One more year." However, that year, in and of itself, won't change a thing. But with the vinedresser adding extra care and enrichment, there is hope. That's precisely what God wants to do with each of our lives today. Work with us, shape us, prune us, water us. If we will let him, imagine the fruit that could grow in the coming year. The parable of the barren fig tree is a parable of the past, complete with wasted opportunities and unfulfilled possibilities. But it is also a parable of a gracious owner, a concerned vinedresser, and a future full of hope. God's forgiveness and allowing us another chance gives us the opportunity to start over whenever we express the earnest desire to do so. When we invite Jesus to tend us, enrich us, we begin to produce fruit from the gifts we have received.

Each and every day we wake up whole and intact. We have the opportunity to start all over again.

I heard the call when I was 10 years old. I was ordained 30 years later. I have been a priest for almost 16 years. You do the math! It has been the best time, the most exciting time, the most challenging time. A time I feel has brought forth fruit and gifts I never realized I had. And I thank God every day. You can too. You can change your life....today. And there's not better time.

 
 
BackTop
 
   
125 West El Alameda, Palm Springs, California 92262 - Find Us Map
Church Office: 760.320.7488 - Email: info@stpaulinthedesert.com