 


The Arbor

Behind an apartment at the edge of town stands an arbor.
Six feet high, it was designed and built to support
climbing plants, and it has been put to good use. The
residents have planted climbing roses at the base of
the arbor posts, and then added trellises to help the
roses climb to the top. Beneath the arbor are shrubs,
flowering bushes, and statuary.

Hanging from the rungs at the top are bird feeders.
The arbor is beautiful to see, and undoubtedly a
source of great pleasure to its owners. Nearby
sits a second arbor. Almost identical to the first,
it stands stark, bare,and unused. Its sole adornment
is a fading, yellow thermometer, nailed to
one of the posts. With nothing to cover it,
the wood appears much older and more weathered.
A monument to futility and unrealized purpose, the second
arbor stands stark, bare, and wasted.

Your life stands like an arbor, a gift from God,
waiting to be used. You can choose to complain
that your arbor is too short, or too weathered,
or not as nice as somebody else's, or you can
start planting. God is not going to judge you on
whether your life flowered as beautifully as
someone else's. But God will judge you on whether
you used what he gave you or not.

Beethoven could surely have complained that his
hearing was worse than others, and excused himself
from even trying. He chose to plant instead,
and in the process, revolutionized music. The
famous physicist Steven Hawking could have
complained that few other people have to cope
with a debilitating illness like his. Instead,
he chose to plant, and revolutionized the science
of physics.

For every arbor larger than yours, I can show you
one that is smaller or more dilapidated or more
limited. The choice is yours: complain, or start
planting.

Your life is God's gift to you. What you make of
it is your gift to God.
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