Pickle Heaven Press-James R. Johnson

something to help you laugh and think about life with Christ

olive tree identity — June 26, 2024

olive tree identity

In this age of self-identification, I believe I might identify as a donut. This might come in handy if I were ever pulled over by a policeman for speeding. 

So, what if you were to identify as a tree. What tree would best capture you? Some of us might be hardheaded oaks.  Others fragrant but fragile pines.  You might identify as a cedar so thoroughly resistant to rot.  Some are aspens who tremble when the wind blows.  My wife might consider me to be a pecan tree because I’m nuts. 

Great King David chose to identify as an olive tree or at least he likened himself to one in Psalm 52:8. But why?

Well let’s back up and try to understand his situation.  In Psalm 52, David told of being undermined by a guy named Doeg, the Edomite.  Doeg was an agent of King Saul.  He murdered those who assisted David (1 Samuel 18:22-23) and was chasing after David himself.

So, in the Psalm David spoke directly to dastardly Doeg predicting his downfall.  He wrote, “God will make you a permanent heap of ruins.  He will scoop you up and remove you from your home; he will uproot you from the land of the living – Psalm 5:5 – NETBible ®.

Doeg was entrenched in Saul’s administration.  David promised that God would remove him from power and from his comfortable home and even uproot him entirely from the land.  In other words, Doeg was headed for a disaster at the hand of the Lord.

But because David served the living God and His agenda, he had a different future ahead of him.  He wrote, “But I am like a green olive tree in the house of God” (Psalm 52:8).

Why an olive tree?  It’s the most highly valued tree in the land.  It is exceptionally gnarly but it gets the job done.  This tree thrives in stony, depleted soil where few other trees could survive.

It takes ages for an olive tree to mature, but once it does it is almost impossible to kill.   A tree will thrive and bear fruit for many centuries   If it is completely cut down, it will sprout again from the roots.   The trees in the Garden of Gethsemane today are nurtured by the same root system as the trees that once sheltered Jesus when He prayed there.

That sounds a lot like David. He was a survivor. He outlasted a deranged king who tried to spear him to death.  He survived a civil war led by his treacherous son.  He overcame assaults by the marauding nations that surrounded his people.  He even bested a giant.  Like an olive tree his roots went deep enabling him to defy his often-hostile environment. 

He also professed to be green.  Not grinch green but healthy green.  You could expect him to bear fruit.  A fruitful tree provided olives which were consumed at every meal.  Its oil was used in the place of butter.

The oil was also used to light the night and to dress a wound.  It was even used as a body cleanser.    An olive tree was an enormous source of blessing.

Unlike his predecessor Saul, David brought a phenomenal era of blessing to the nation of Israel as he ruled from the throne.   The nation became spiritually centered, was prosperous, secure and at peace under his godly leadership. 

All this was possible only because David was planted in the house of Lord.   A person’s household, in those days, included his entire estate.   So, David considered himself to be a tree firmly rooted in the Lord’s country, on His estate. 

He was a tree planted by streams of living water, fed and nourished by God’s Word, and trimmed by His correction.

As for us, I guess it doesn’t matter if we are an oak or a pecan.  We just need to make sure that our roots are planted in God’s country.  It is there that we will thrive and be fruitful.

A PRAYER: Lord, I may need to be transplanted.  Will you see to that?

This has been Jim Johnson and pickleheavenpress.com

May the grace of our Lord Jesus be with you always.

face it — March 6, 2024

face it

I’m aged now , but my voice is stronger than ever before.  Oh, I know… my vibrato sounds like it’s wired to a yoyo, and I have a rasp now that could strip the paint off a desk. 

But strength, I got, and I have my patients to thank.  In my work as a hospice chaplain I care for mostly elderly folk.  My injections are not medicinal but verbal.  My goal is to encourage and comfort them as they journey on.  But it can be a challenge.

A typical visit goes like this.  I arrive and find the TV blaring.  The volume is cranked up because the person struggles with hearing.  If they also struggle with their memory, they won’t know where the remote is. 

So, I have to ratchet up the volume of my voice to be heard over the TV.  Everyone else in the facility can hear me except my patient.  I sometimes think of the biblical Proverb, “If someone blesses his neighbor with a loud voice early in the morning, it will be counted as a curse to him.” – Proverbs 27:14. I bet I get cursed a lot.

Some have profound hearing loss.  There was a sweet lady who was 102 years old.  Her vocabulary was small – mostly the word, “What?”   She loved to hear me sing hymns.  But to do so, I had to crowd my guitar and my face inches from her ear and sing at levels that would shatter glass.

After 5 years of that kind of vocal workout, I have developed a lot of strength.  That’s just what happens when we are forced to meet the challenges of life.

No one said it better than James in his epistle.  He wrote, “…consider it nothing but joy when you fall into all sorts of trials, because you know that the testing of your faith produces endurance.” –  James 1:2-3

He tells us how we are to think about our challenges.  He used the word, “when” not, “If.” Testing is to be expected so we need to be prepared.  

He also used the word, “joy.”  We are to consider the challenges as a source of joy.  No one is happy about difficulty, but we can have transcending joy, knowing that God is in control and that our testing is being used by Him to improve us.

Then there is the word “endurance.”    In the Greek, this word is “hupomeno” which carries the idea of standing under – yet bearing up under a great weight.  Think of the competitive weightlifter who jerks the bar over his head.  He scores only if he keeps it elevated and stable.

James tells us that challenges build stamina in us.    

Now you might wonder, “Yes, but wouldn’t life be better without the drama?”   Well, do you remember Biosphere 2?  It was a massive glass enclosed ecosystem in Arizona, an artificial earth created to better understand the forces at work in our world. 

They discovered that the trees within the biosphere would grow far more quickly than those outside.  But – they seldom grew to maturity because they toppled over from their own weight. 

You see wind aggravates and stimulates a tree to grow broader, deeper, and firmer roots but there was no wind in that greenhouse, so the trees toppled. 

And so, it is with us.  Without experiencing opposing forces, we would grow weak and sickly and eventually collapse.

Meeting the demands of your snarky boss is good preparation for one day caring for your aging parent.  Waiting on your child to potty train helps prepare you for those days when they the child takes forever to move into adulthood.

I serve patients whose bodies wither while their spirits soar simply, because their faith has been tested and strengthened and proven through the years. 

So let the winds blow, knowing that you are getting better, and your roots are growing deeper.

And PS: Forgive me if this post is too loud.  It’s just a habit.

This has been Jim Johnson and pickleheavenpress.com

A Prayer: Lord, help us endure your lessons in endurance!

May the grace of our Lord Jesus be with you always.

Scripture references are from the NETBible ®