Tuesday, April 12, 2011

exotic fruit


My knife slices cleanly through the thin golden skin, 
revealing the bright orange flesh of a papaya.
And I am suddenly very aware of what I'm doing.
I'm cutting into a fruit that I never ate in the US,
because there it was a luxury.

Here, papaya trees grow rampant, and the papaya above cost something like 15 cents.
We eat papaya almost every day.
And we eat pineapple almost every day.
Yes, they are small ones, but they are the best pineapple you've ever had.
and they, along with the papaya, are the cheapest fruit in town.


These fruits, exotic by some standards,
are staples in this economy.

And this slicing open of a papaya also slices open a door somewhere in my mind.
As the seeds slide over and around the blade of the knife, the seed of an idea plants itself inside of me.

Not all fruit is equally valuable to all men.

What is of value to us 
may be a fruit you would be more than ready to trade for one of ours.

I won't tell you how much we might be willing to pay for a fresh strawberry.
Or any fresh berry for that matter.
Or a Bartlett pear, 
or a peach.  
Fruit that's not only rare, it's just not here.


So, I wonder, are the fruits of the Spirit also not all of equal value in all men?

The fruit I might most value, because it is most rare in my life,
might be plentiful in yours.


But the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, forbearance, kindness, goodness, faithfulness,  gentleness and self-control. Against such things there is no law. 
Galatians 5:22-23

The joy I find most exotic, most unattainable, is perhaps truly more valuable fruit when it finally is found growing in the soil of my heart.  
Conversely, the fruit of gentleness may grow more naturally there, so though it may be considered of high value to another, in my life does God see it of less value, because it comes more easily, more naturally?

Could it be that not all fruit is of equal value?

When I find myself craving peace,
when I ask the Lord of the Harvest to develop that fruit in me,
and He, 
despite the hostile soil 
and the weeds that would choke it out,
finally brings the fruit of peace in my life,
is it not of greater worth than if it had come easily to me?


So I take heart.
Those most rare fruits,
the ones I crave to see in my life,
are the fruits that even in a small, under-grown, unripe condition
may actually be of great worth in the sight of my Maker.



4 comments:

The Church Cook said...

SMILE.....what a great post! Thank you for this reminder! Hugs! Wish we can exchange some Ottowa Farm berries with your beautiful fruit! :)

us5 said...

wish i had enough fruit of the Spirit to exchange for some of your goodness, Kay! :)

The Girls said...

Oh! Barbara...your words touch me in a deep place of my heart! I struggle to bear any fruit on so many days. Thank you for sharing your heart with me today. Your words and insight are such an encouragement and point me to what God might be doing in my own life, while sharing what He's doing in yours. I really do miss you so!

us5 said...

thank you, sweet friend! isn't God good? i miss you, too, and give thanks for all the beautiful fruit in your life...