When Danna was in kindergarten, she had a very creative science 
teacher, Miss Kay, who constantly planned fun activities and projects 
for the children.  Danna loved her and was always talking about what she
 learned in science class.  One day, as I waited for Danna in the 
carpool line, I spotted her standing by Miss Kay, grinning from ear to 
ear, jumping up and down as if she simply could not wait for me to get 
there.  As I pulled up, Danna hopped into the car, gave a huge sigh of 
satisfaction and stretched out her tiny hand, proudly displaying the 
amazing reason for her enthusiasm -- a wadded up paper towel.
 Now I am normally very good at being excited about the things my kids 
find important, but for the life of me, I could not fathom why Danna 
would be so thrilled with a crumpled paper towel. “Honey, what is that?”
 I asked.   She looked up at me with sparkling brown eyes and whispered,
 “Mom, there are seeds in here. Miss Kay gave them to me and I’m gonna 
plant them and they are gonna grow.  Can you believe it?”
 Given my morbid experience with seeds, I declined to answer that 
question but instead, chose to join my daughter in her excitement – 
until I saw them.  Evidently, Danna had been carrying the seeds around 
all day because when she carefully unfolded the paper towel all I could 
see was a big mess of broken, mismatched, crushed and crumbled seeds. 
Looking into the eager eyes of my daughter I said, “Honey, if these 
seeds don’t grow for some reason, remember that we can go to the store 
and buy some new ones.”  Clutching the seeds tightly to her heart and 
out of my reach, Danna said, “Mama, they have to grow ‘cause I prayed 
and asked God to please make them grow, and He said He would!”  I began 
planning our trip to the gardening center.
 Danna was silent all the way home, but when we pulled into our drive 
way, she jumped out of the car and darted into the house, leaving her 
doubting mother behind.  Moments later Danna ran back outside with a 
small paper cup in her hand. I watched as she scooped up dirt from the 
front flower bed and marched confidently back into the house.  I 
followed her, moaning my silent complaint, “Father, do you realize that 
your reputation is on the line here?  Why did she have to pick that 
particular flower bed, the one we filled with decorative rocks because 
nothing, not even weeds, would grow there?”  Once again, I tried to 
reason with Danna. “Honey, why don’t we just buy some new seeds?”  
Ignoring my faithless question, Danna stuffed the broken seeds down into
 the cup,  marched to the kitchen sink and, placing the cup under the 
faucet, turned the water on full blast. Just as fast as the seeds and 
dirt spilled over the edge of the cup into the sink, Danna scooped them 
up and poked them back in, all the way to the bottom of the cup so they 
could not escape.  “Miss Kay says that they have to have sunshine to 
grow.”  With this announcement, she placed her soggy cup of broken, 
mismatched seeds on the kitchen window sill that looks out over our 
screened in porch; a place purposely designed to receive no sunlight at 
all.  By this time, I knew that my words were falling on deaf ears and 
decided to let God handle this one. 
 Several days later, I was standing at the kitchen sink preparing dinner
 when I glanced out on the porch to see my daughter’s faith on 
spectacular display.  A small paper cup filled with green sprouts 
confronted my doubting heart.  I could not believe my eyes. Dropping the
 potatoes in the sink, I literally ran to Danna’s room shouting, “Danna!
 Danna!  Your seeds are growing!” I found her calmly playing “Chutes and
 Ladders” with Danielle, her best friend. “Danna, did you hear me? Your 
seeds are growing!” A brief glance and knowing smile from Danna said it 
all. “That is neat, Mom. I knew they would.” She and Danielle resumed 
their game, leaving me to gaze in awe and wonder at the faith of my 
child who dared to believe in a broken dream. 
 You may be hopeless, clinging to the broken and mismatched remnants of 
your life, wondering how you can go on. Whispers of the enemy creep into
 your heart, soul and mind, taunting you with the lie that you are just 
too dirty and broken for God to love or use. Nothing you do can change 
that reality so you might as well give up, throwing your life away. 
 Nothing could be further from the truth, my friend. Never underestimate
 the power of one, tiny broken seed.  Placed in the right hands, it will
 surely grow into an expression of His beauty for all to see.
 
amazing how we forget to be a child...and yet it says in the BIBLE...that we must be like little children to enter heaven. What a sweet reminder!!! Of course I am reminded too, of the movie Its a Wonderful Life. ZuZu's petals...!!!! "Fix it, daddy!" Oh the faith of a child!!
ReplyDeletekids just take it at face value that everything will work out in the end. Its we adults who prime them for worries AND DOUBT as they grow. Gotta love the kids!
ReplyDeletethese comments say it all! Thanks for the story!
ReplyDelete