The local council removed a large tree from the parkway in front of my house and left a large patch of bare dirt. Being winter the turf was dormant and did not fill in the damaged patches of lawn topped up with sand. Though we did not have rain for months, apparently the clover did not get the memo. When healthy Sir Walter turf spreads thick and is quite impenetrable, but the patchy condition made it susceptible to invasive weeds. As I pulled weeds this afternoon, looking over at my neighbour's lawn which was completely green and weed free, it was obvious a healthy lawn is the best defense against unwanted weeds.
Bare spots in the lawn practically invite weeds to spring up uncontested. This shows the folly of trying only to resist sin rather than to flee from it and do what is right. Some vice will surely fill the bare spots in our character unless good things are sown there. Turf must be watered and fed regularly, and properly winterising it would have prevented a lot of the weeds I pulled from growing at all. I was reading and came across a great quote from C.S. Lewis in Mere Christianity today:
Bare spots in the lawn practically invite weeds to spring up uncontested. This shows the folly of trying only to resist sin rather than to flee from it and do what is right. Some vice will surely fill the bare spots in our character unless good things are sown there. Turf must be watered and fed regularly, and properly winterising it would have prevented a lot of the weeds I pulled from growing at all. I was reading and came across a great quote from C.S. Lewis in Mere Christianity today:
"Good and evil both increase at compound interest. That is why the little decisions you and I make every day are of such infinite importance. The smallest good act today is the capture of a strategic point from which, a few months later, you may be able to go on to victories you never dreamed of. An apparently trivial indulgence in lust or anger today is the loss of a ridge or railway line or bridgehead from which the enemy may launch an attack otherwise impossible." (Lewis, C. S. Mere Christianity & the Screwtape Letters: Complete in One Volume. HarperSanFrancisco, 2003.)It is good to see the purpose in one seemingly small act can have massive, long-reaching implications. C.S. Lewis wrote at a time when World War 2 loomed large in the minds of people, where the deeds of one heroic man or coward might change the course of war. Realising we are in a battle with our flesh and that our allegiance is to Christ about self is something we must often be reminded. I want to progress in maturity and faith, not backslide. Sometimes we will make mistakes and need to drop to our knees to clear away the weeds of sin in repentance, but let us stand in faith and press on doing good for God's glory. That denial of the flesh and choosing to do good is like a patch of green turf which will spread in time.
No comments:
Post a Comment
To uphold the integrity of this site, no comments with links for advertising will be posted. No ads here! :)