The Daily Courier

Humankind’s first culture was horticultu­re

- PHIL COLLINS

With this new life online, I am doing my fair share of shepherdin­g Zoom gatherings.

I always enjoy hearing how people are feeling. These times are often surprising­ly emotional, following connection after weeks of separation. They tell stores of juggling life in the pandemic.

What I have observed in my onscreen meetings is that there is a clear theme. You might think the theme is of deep thoughts of theologica­l and philosophi­cal study.

No. Everyone is talking about their yards and their gardens how their tomato plants are flourishin­g or dying. The ingenious ways they are protecting the plants from the terror of frost with the armoury of plastic and how they are defeating the weeds.

People are gushing about their beloved plants, their nurtured soil or plans for a great harvest.

In a time of global crisis, people are retreating to their yards.

I must confess that I have purchased a small greenhouse and placed it proudly on my deck. We love our gardens. God also loves gardens.

Throughout the Bible, the garden is a wellwatere­d space set apart for the intense cultivatio­n of plants.

It is an image of both the wonder of nature and sacred space to find peace and His refreshing life.

People of faith and no faith are seeing the sacred in their yards, a place of peace. The world is in a pandemic, and we are creating small areas of heavenly paradise. A place to be, to think and find reconcilia­tion with the world’s chaos.

The term paradise derives from the Persian word for a walled garden. A place for God and a place to join God; this was paradise in the Ancient world.

A biblical garden is a touchstone of such motifs as provision, beauty, abundance and the satisfacti­on of the human need.

Next to heaven, it is the preeminent image of human longing.

I believe we are all deeply longing for the original paradise that was lost, or place that shares the qualities of the original paradise. Humanity has always pictured perfection as an enclosed garden, lush with vegetation and suffused with tranquilli­ty.

The Garden of Eden is more than a physical place; it is also a way of life and a state of the soul. That is why so many of my parishione­rs say they feel close to God in their beautiful gardens.

The very simplicity of life in the garden is so different from the complexiti­es of our modern civilizati­on.

As we drive our hands in the cool dark soil, plant our seeds and watch our flowers bloom, may you find the peaceful presence of Christ, who came to lead us back to the beauty of the original garden.

Phil Collins is Pastor at Willow Park Church Kelowna.

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