Plum Gone!
We have two fruit trees in our front yard: an apple tree and a plum tree. The fruit produced by both is exceptional. Every spring I watch with delight as the blossoms fill the branches; every summer I enjoy checking on the progressing fruit; and every fall the entire family looks forward to tasting the final produce.
An interesting thing occurred this fall. I checked on the plums one day and found them ripe and ready for picking. However, I couldn’t get to the task that day, so I determined to harvest the fruit in the next few days. Two days later I looked at the tree, remembering I must find time for pulling the plums, only to find the entire tree bare of fruit!
My first thought: someone snuck into the yard overnight and harvested the purple beauties. But the plum tree was plum bare … including the highest branches. It’s possible someone would be so bold as to grab the fruit off the lower branches … even in our well- lit yard next to a house that always seems to have some lights on and some people moving around. But to reach the highest plums, they would need a ladder … and to see the hidden plums in the dark, they would need a flashlight … both of which would make the crime particularly brazen and extremely unlikely.
Which means that the tree was stripped by some marauding animals or birds. The potential suspects are multiple. Even though we reside in a larger city, we have plenty of crows, opossums, and raccoons – all omnivores – residing here as well. In fact, just the other night just a half-block away from our house, I saw a raccoon family of at least four. Now that I reflect back, they were all heading toward our place. (Maybe the mystery is solved? Or maybe it was a combination of many thieves?)
The moral of the story is – I was expecting and even anticipating enjoying the fruit from our tree, only to find it stolen away at the end. When the reality hit, my emotions flowed from shock to anger to disappointment to sorrow.
Afterwards the thought struck me that sadly there are many people living that story in their spiritual lives. They become engrossed in the joys and difficulties and distractions and busyness of their physical lives – all the while looking forward to the fruits they expect are awaiting them in heaven at the end – but along the way they neglect their souls. And when this happens, the worst-case scenario can occur: the fruit of their faith can be lost or stolen. (The Bible shows us this is a possibility! See Jesus’ explanation of the parable of the sower in Matthew 13:18-23 or read Hebrews 6:4-6.)
Finding one’s faith gone when facing the Lord is a profoundly more serious tragedy than finding one’s plums gone.
Which is why the Apostle John warned us about becoming engrossed in this world. “Do not love the world or anything in the world. If anyone loves the world, love for the Father is not in them. For everything in the world—the lust of the flesh, the lust of the eyes, and the pride of life—comes not from the Father but from the world. The world and its desires pass away, but whoever does the will of God lives forever” (1 John 2:15-17).
It’s also why Jesus himself posed these thought-provoking questions: “What good will it be for someone to gain the whole world, yet forfeit their soul? Or what can anyone give in exchange for their soul?” (Matthew 16:26). The answers seem obvious, yet so many opt to live ignoring them. And some of these folks will experience spiritual tragedy.
May you and I not be one of them! Better to lose everything than to lose Christ! Better to lose the entire world than to lose salvation! Better to neglect literally anything than to neglect God’s word and our souls that it feeds and fills.
The Apostle Paul’s encouragement is my encouragement as well … to both you and me. “So then, just as you received Christ Jesus as Lord, continue to live your lives in him, rooted and built up in him, strengthened in the faith as you were taught, and overflowing with thankfulness” (Colossians 2:6-7).
My plums are plum gone. But my Savior is not! May my faith in him never be either!
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2 thoughts on “Plum Gone!”
Thanks, Pastor Dave, hitting the nail on the head again for us with your thoughtful reflection. This is just ‘plum beautiful.’ Rick
Good message. On a side note, I grow a small garden with tomatoes amoung other vegetables and flowers. The squirrels that live nearby delight in eating the tomatoes. I have had to harvest tomatoes green to get some. It’s good to share the bounty with others, even squirrels.
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