Lent 5B March 25, 2012
Going Back to Seed Potential by Tom CoxMost research tells us that the key trait of happy people is that they have a purpose. In short they invest their lives in something. At a time of high unemployment, this can seem a bit of a tall order. However, if you ask a happy person, how they are in life, bleak economic situations dont seem to come into it. They will inevitably tell you enthusiastically of something theyre at or doing. It could be work, or maybe investing time and talent in a child at a crucial stage of their development. All in all, as they will explain, it really seems to give them life. Even if it seems (in economic terms at least) to be giving more than receiving. It does seem that we are genetically coded to flourish under fire to quote the title of a recent book by popular psychologist Maureen Gaffney. She contends that we are meant to have well-being, meaning and purpose in our lives. Agreed, but how do we achieve this. Basically by dying to self and living for others. Something needs to switch this on. Jesus speaks of a grain of wheat dying. What happens there? Inside every seed is an embryo that has a root going into the ground and a shoot going up. It also has an on and off switch. The time and soil temperature must be right before the on switch allows oxygen in water to come into the seed. When it takes in water, it expands, breaking the seed coat and producing sugar and proteins and ultimately fruit. Something like that needs to happen to us. Maybe the outside conditions are not ideal in our country, in our community, in our life. Perhaps we are a dried up shrivelled seed - but we are destined to grow and flourish. We approach Holy Week. Next Sunday may see your community gather in a different space outside the Church to mark His entrance into Jerusalem. Perhaps you will bring your own green branch. As you cut it off this week from the life giving shrub it belongs to- consider this; what way are we cut off from the life giving power of God. In Jesus Christ we have someone worth living for and great enough to die for. Or are we like the amateur gardener, who bought the seed packs. They now have beautiful pictures of flowers on those same seed packs. The seed which was never immersed in soil, lie shrivelled and dormant within its paper coffin. It would be terrible if our true epitaph at the end of life were to be a similar returned unopened.(Comments to Tom at tomasmacconchoille@googlemail.com )
