2016/09/14

The Seasons of Harvest

Late summer is watermelon time in Texas. The young Allen Lacy's passion for watermelon caused him to ask his granddaddy why they couldn't eat it all year round. This elderly man's wise reply was: 

We have watermelons because the Good Lord saw fit to give us watermelons. It was one of the better things He did, and special things need special times and seasons. God gave Texas a little more heat than most places just so that our watermelons would be the best on earth. It's a blessing, but the last thing in the world we need here in Texas is a few more months of heat, just for the sake of more watermelon.

Unfortunately, most grocers are not bound by "times and seasons"—I can buy peaches any month of the year. But how does a January peach taste? It was picked green in South America, trucked to a port, shipped to a U.S. port, trucked to a warehouse and, finally, delivered to my grocery store. The result? What do you think?! It is either stone hard or mushy soft. After many, many  disappointments, this fool is learning to resist the false hope of non-seasonal fruit. I now spend my money on fall apples, winter citrus, spring asparagus, summer peaches.

The challenge in life, too, is to enjoy seasonal fruit. Solomon claimed: There is a time for everything, and a season for every activity under heaven. (Eccl.3:1) Are you a parent of young children? Then enjoy the sweet taste of morning snuggling and bedtime reading, of candid conversations and corkscrewed reasoning, of trusting spirits and untrustworthy emotions. That delicate fruit will soon be gone. Don't crave a child who uses the toilet and sleeps through the night and carries on a rational discussion (which won't happen until they are 40!).

South Dakotans joke that we have two seasons—winter and road repair! Both provide abundant ammunition for complainers. A number of years ago Cathy and I recognized that we were habitually crabbing about our long, bleak winters. "Why does it have to be so cold?" "I don't think spring will ever come." "These icy roads are horrible!" "I'm so tired of being cold; I can't wait to be hot." "Why would anyone choose to live here?!"

Stabbed by prisoner Paul's claim that he could be content in any and every situation, we sought to enjoy the season of winter. We bought cross-country skis. We put a wood-burning fireplace in our new home. We fellowship with others more frequently. We bundle up most winter days—if the snowdrifts aren't too high or the wind-chill too low—and hike outdoors. We try to embrace the slower pace of winter. While the garden and other warm-weather activities lie dormant, we have more time to read, reflect, converse, and write.

Are you entering your senior years?  Do you find yourself in poverty? Have you recently become empty-nesters?  When our boys were young it was a challenge to get them to taste new food. "Com'n. Try a little. You'll like it." Maybe our heavenly Father is coaxing his kids in the same way. "Com'n. This season's fruit is superb. Won't you try a bite?"