Talk about “night visitors”! As I went outside juggling a basket of wet laundry, I almost stepped on some surprise squatters. These brown umbrella disks had popped overnight through some scraggly grass where I’d overwatered. If you didn’t know, a mushroom is a fast-growing fungus that feeds off decaying matter and is common in moist places. I knew they wouldn’t last more than a few days, but went ahead and snapped them away, depositing them in the garbage. I’d recently studied Psalm 1 and toyed with how verse 3 (about the godly man) would read if mushrooms were substituted for that tree planted by streams of water:
He is like a mushroom that pops up in moist
places. He feeds on decay, and in a couple days withers away.
Obviously, the analogy doesn’t work. The psalmist made the perfect analogy to a sturdy fruit tree whose roots grow deep, producing fruit season after season. The application, of course, is sending out deep spiritual roots that will support the growing of spiritual fruit.
This is the growth process J. Oswald Sanders wrote about in The Joy of Following Jesus: “It is the responsibility of the disciple to be the best he or she can be for God. To please Him is a most worthy aim. He wants us to realize the full purpose of our creation; He does not want us to be content with bland mediocrity” (Moody, 1994, p. 63).
Perhaps it’s because I’m so aware of media addictions that this quote burns into my heart. The “mushroom mentality” feeds on the world’s decay, widely served up enticingly with the click of a computer mouse or a TV remote. Every morning, for example, when I open up my computer’s “home page” to check the weather or start some research, I’m blindsided by what someone thinks is “news” or “trend.” The computer helps me as a writer on spiritual topics, but I could waste hours following cutesy animal videos, celebrity gossip, fashion, sports, games, or personal trivia.
Sanders hit it on the nail: “Many
fail to achieve anything significant for God or man because they lack a
dominating ambition. No great task was
ever achieved without the complete abandonment to it that a worthy ambition
inspires.” How we use our time is a choice—for good or bad. Sanders cited the story of Thomas
Scott (1747-1821), who was the low-achiever of his school. In those days they called him the
“dunce.” Most of his teachers expected
little of him. But someone, somewhere,
said something that awakened in him a master ambition. Slowly, steadily he worked toward it. Sanders
continued, “He grew to be a strong and worthy man”—so well-regarded that he
succeeded John Newton (former slave trader-turned-believer, best known for
“Amazing Grace”) as rector of the church at Aston Sandford.
He also wrote a large commentary on the whole
Bible that influenced his generation and is still consulted. Scott didn’t
achieve that feeding on the decay of the world.
His roots went down deep with God. His life yielded fruit. His leaves
didn’t wither. What he did, prospered.
“Mushroom” choices aren’t anything new. The apostle Paul anguished over those he saw in his times, and encouraged stronger believers to help those so entrapped. But he offered a warning for the “helpers” as well: be careful. His counsel in Galatians 6:1 (at right) is a good “screen saver”!
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