
I have written before about how I am not good with plants. If the term “brown thumb” was invented for anyone, it was likely me. I have been known to even kill a cactus. I am so resigned to this reality that when someone gifts me a potted plant, even one with blooms already on it, my immediate reaction is guilt about how short a life the plant can expect in my care.
So, imagine my surprise when a similar gift from last Christmas, a Christmas cactus, began blooming today. I was so shocked, that I went online to learn about the plant’s blooming practices. It was in this research that I learned I have been doing everything wrong. The research says the plant should never be in direct light (it is sitting in the full blast of the sunrise every morning); it says you should only water the plant when the top two inches are dry (I am pretty sure I water it weekly no matter what); and it says the plant should be kept in a cool, humid space (nope, and nope). So, despite all my mistakes, despite how this plant should likely be dead by now, here this cute plant is blooming for the first time.
That plant has reminded me of two things today. First, that plant has reminded me of the ways that God can work for good despite me. I do not have the gifts, interest, or time to lovingly help plants thrive. But God has taken my measly offerings – the occasional remembrance to water the plant without any recollection how long ago I watered it last, the guilt that has kept me from throwing the plant away before now, and the half-hearted attempt to at least give the plant sunlight – God has taken these offerings and transformed them not just to survival, but to thriving. I am humbled by a God who can produce good despite me.
Two, I am also struck by the fact that this plant is just one tiny example of the small goodness that surrounds us all the time. The last week has been a rough one, especially in a congregation and a community that is very “purple” politically. Though we are quite civil with one another, emotions have been all over the spectrum and I have been struggling to see where the hope is. But the truth is hope and goodness have been around me this whole time. I certainly see hope in this plant who is thriving despite me – and looking quite beautiful, indeed. I see hope in the ways people are caring for one another – asking how people are really doing, and finding ways to offer solidarity and comfort where possible. And I see hope as parishioners increase their giving to the church in a time when budgets are stretched and prices are rising. We could find counter arguments for all those instances – reasons to be wary or suspicious or doubtful. Or we can choose to notice the blooms opening slowly all around us. I am not entirely sure what God is doing these days, but I have to tell you, I feel confident that God is here, bringing us comfort and signs of hope. And that will suffice for today.
