Plowing
It’s winter right now in Indiana. That means that spring is just a few months away. (I went to school for 12 years to learn that!) Here in Indiana, spring means time to plow and plant for most farmers. They tear up the old stalks and roots, and bring fresh soil to the surface. That allows them to plant new seed on top that will flourish and grow. But what happens if that farmer doesn’t plow his field and just throws seed on top of it all? (Some of you from in the city may have to think harder about this one.) Very little grows. Shocking, I know. Scripture points this out to us too:
Proverbs 20:4 (NCV) “Lazy farmers don’t plow when they should; they expect a harvest, but there is none.”
I find myself like that lazy farmer a lot. It’s hard to part with old things. They’re just comfortable. I’m pretty sure you know what I’m talking about too. What are those policies, programs, ideas, or people that are comfortable and are so hard to get rid of? They’re like the old crops for the farmer. We try and tell ourselves that we can add this new thing to the old thing, and it’ll be better. Take this hypothetical classroom for example: you have an old, grumpy, generally angry guy teaching a class. So you think, “Well, if I just put someone less grumpy in there with him, it’ll all be OK.” The thing is, the problem is still there. You’re just masking it. You can throw fertile new young hearts out onto that soil, but few of them will take. You haven’t plowed the problem.
Sometimes, plowing things up and getting rid of the old is painful. It takes a sharp blade to plow. You’ll make people mad. It’s guaranteed. I realize you can’t just go around offending everybody. That’s poor leadership. There’s also a point at which you let yourself be walked on too much. That’s poor leadership too. It all comes down to what’s more important. Offending a few adults who have had years to grow in their faith, or turning an entire generation of kids with fertile new hearts (seeds) off to the Gospel because you weren’t willing to plow up the old stuff? Take a look at your ministry today: what can you start plowing up?