Newness of Life

Today, we celebrate the greatest moment in time: Christ’s resurrection. What seemed dead and hopeless on the cross became our salvation when He defeated death once and for all. We await our eternity with Him because of what we celebrate today. We are blessed to have His truth in the written Word, but God has placed His truth in His creation as well (Romans 1:20). What seemed dead just a season ago has come to life again, bringing joy in its beauty and fruit. In our own seasons of life, we experience both pain in suffering and joy in blessing. We serve a King who understands what it means to live a human life. He comforts us in our sorrow and rejoices in our choices to produce fruit. He is patient and willing to forgive when we’ve sinned against Him, and He is willing to discipline us to shape us to become more like Him, bearing fruit for the kingdom of God.

As I walked around my home and took time to enjoy God’s creation, I was amazed at the details He made in each plant and creature. No matter how many years I see the process, it never gets old. The wind blew strong at times, but if the roots were strong, the plant could withstand it. Yet in the distance, I could hear a crack in the woods, resulting in a dead tree laying across the path. Death and life portrayed in one moment. It left me to ponder who I will choose to be. Will I let myself die spiritually and be uprooted? Or will I be willing to face what life has to offer and bear fruit even through the strongest of storms? I serve a Savior who went through it all, and the Father raised Him back to life. No matter what I go through, if my trust is in Him as Jesus’ was, what do I have to fear?

I’m thankful that the Lord has given me a joy for His creation because it has taught me–and continues to teach me–so much. I’m also thankful to be inspired by His Word of truth to write poems and songs that I pray will bring honor and glory to Him.

Here are some poems turned into songs to celebrate seasons of life and Christ’s sacrifice for our sins:

Beauty in His Blood

Seasons Change

Love Divine

Here are some pictures from my nature walk around the house and in the garden 🙂 Hope you enjoy them and that they remind you of the newness of life we have in Christ.

Sage about to bloom
Rosemary in bloom
Sage about to bloom
An iris about to bloom
Dandelion ready to spread its seeds
Another iris about to bloom
Rose
Rose
Rose
Rose
Rosemary in bloom
Mulberry tree growing fruit
Another iris about to bloom
Cluster of blackberry buds getting ready to bloom
Echinacea flower
Sage with a green garden spiders (these particular spiders love my sage plants)
Yellow Wood Sorrel
Hibiscus starting to leaf
Strawberry starting to grow
Mustard greens in bloom
Wild violet that likes to grow out the sides of my raised beds
Crimson clover
Crimson clover
Crimson clover
Crimson clover
Arugula in bloom
Borage
Borage
Collards about to bloom
Cluster of blueberries growing 🙂
Blackberry blossom
Fig leaves starting to come out
Apple blossom (smells so good!)
Apple blossom
Apple blossoms
Apple blossom
Pear starting to grow
Pear starting to grow
Ground ivy in bloom (beautiful design and the leaves smell wonderful when you step on them)
Ground ivy in bloom
Ground ivy in bloom
Elderberry clusters growing (transplanted from a nearby ditch within the last couple years- it’s getting huge!)
Elderberry clusters growing
Elderberry clusters growing
Canna lily growing

Canna lily growing
Unknown nut tree- transplanted from nearby woods, but unsure of type yet
Pecan tree (has yet to produce nuts over the last few years)
Pecan tree
Possibly a white violet (wildflower)
Ferns
Hosta
Beautiful dragonfly
Beautiful dragonfly

© Lauren Demuth

Restoring the Garden

Weeding. For those of us who have done gardening or any kind of landscaping, we know it is not a pleasurable task. Rather, it can be downright frustrating. We try our best to get plants to grow that we actually planted, but it always seems the weeds grow better, faster, and stronger. It can be hard to keep up, especially after a good rain. Sometimes we just let them grow and get used to them to the point where they don’t bother us anymore. They become part of the garden, and we give ourselves excuses for their existence. “I just don’t have time.” “They’re not really that big.” “I’ll get them in the fall or winter when everything else dies.” But do you ever notice how a lot of weeds tend to persist even when most of our desirable plants have died off? I believe everything about creation shows us who God is, and He even shared truths through parables, using aspects of creation, like planting seed and farming, to help us better understand Him and the choices we make. Paul captures this clearly in Romans 1:20:

“For since the creation of the world [God’s] attributes, His eternal power and divine nature, have been clearly seen, being understood through what has been made, so that they are without excuse.” (NASB)

The “they” in this verse is referring back to verse 18 where Paul talks about “men who suppress the truth in unrighteousness.” Such people, and really all of us, are without excuse just by the evidence of God in creation. This is even more true since we also have His very Word. He is gracious to remind us of Himself even in tasks like gardening.

While there are noticeable weeds in the garden, there are also those that aren’t so obvious, specifically the ones that are embedded in the good plants. These ones take more time to spot and are more delicate to remove because there’s a chance the removal can damage what is good. But if they aren’t removed, more harm can come to the good plant. The nutrients meant for the good plant also get used by the weed. And any gardener–whether new or experienced–knows, if you don’t get the root, it will come right back. Some roots go straight down and are easy to pull whereas others spread and can harm multiple plants.

Our spiritual life is also a garden. The good plants are from seeds that get planted by the Word of God and His truth, and the weeds are the different parts of our lives that try to choke out the truth. In the Parable of the Sower, Jesus explains to His disciples that the seeds sown among the thorns “are the ones who have heard the word, but the worries of the world, and the deceitfulness of riches, and the desires for other things enter in and choke the word, and it becomes unfruitful” (Mark 4:18-19). I must confess, it has been a difficult past few days because the Lord revealed to me that I have many weeds in my garden that I didn’t realize existed. I’ve been busy trying to help others with their spiritual gardens while mine was filled with weeds. Even worse, the plants I thought were producing fruit were unfertilized flowers just wilting away. The Lord has brought this to my attention before, and I would clean things up for awhile, but the worries of the world and other people’s approval and my pride became my focus rather on tending the garden. In our spiritual life, tending the garden is year-round, 24/7 work. While the process isn’t pleasurable, and maybe sometimes it hurts to get rid of weeds that look beautiful (not all are thorny), the reward is eternity with God which outweighs all the work. As the church, we have the opportunity to help each other pull up weeds with words of truth, but we also can’t neglect our own spiritual garden. In the end, each of us is accountable for its condition. Will it be full of fruitful and beautiful good plants, or will it be full of weeds with mere remnants of what is good? 

© Lauren Demuth