Life Is In The Seed
Life Is In The Seed
By
Curtis Peter Van Gorder
Planting
seeds and watching them grow can be a wonderful, gratifying experience. Of
course, planting a few seeds in a flower pot and farming are two different
things. I once thought farming would be easy and attempted to plant corn in an
abandoned field that my family owned. I rented a tiller and dug up the ground,
bought some seed corn and planted it, and hauled water to help the seeds
germinate, but I had planted too late in the year and frost killed the shoots
when they were still tender. Next I tried to grow spinach, but the bugs had a
feast and I got their leftovers. After those experiences I was thankful that I
didn’t have to make my living by farming. They did, however, give me a greater
appreciation for farmers. I will never again take a single ear of corn or leaf
of spinach for granted!
A
seed is the beginning of something much bigger. The seed of the globe turnip,
for example, is less than 1 mm (one-twentieth of an inch) in diameter, but
within a few months it can grow into a mature turnip that weighs 27 million
times its original weight. If conditions are right, it will increase its own
weight by 1500% in one minute.
You
might think that it would take a large seed to produce a large plant. Not so.
The giant redwood tree, the largest tree in the world, grows from a seed only
1.6 mm (1/16 of an inch) long. Nor is a large seed required for beauty. One of
the most stunning flowers, the orchid, comes from one of the tiniest seeds and
grows solely on moisture and nutrients it draws from the air, no soil required.
A million orchid seeds weigh 29 grams (about 1 ounce).
It
takes the proper conditions for seeds to germinate and the plant to grow and
mature, but if conditions aren’t right, some seeds are able to wait it out.
Beneath thick ice, in a frozen lemming burrow, scientists found seeds of the
arctic tundra lupine which they calculated to be 5,000 years old. The seeds
germinated in 48 hours when put in warm, fertile soil.
So
if you feel inconsequential, too small, too young, or too old, take heart!
Perhaps there is latent greatness in you, just waiting to be brought to life by
the power of God. Let the warm sunshine of His love and the water of His Word
work their miracle.
Curtis
Peter Van Gorder is a member of the Family International in the
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