Last spring I decided to cut down the rose bush by our back door. In the three years wed lived in our home, it hadnt produced many flowers, and its ugly, fruitless branches were now creeping in all directions.
But life got busy, and my gardening plan got delayed. It was just as wellonly a few weeks later that rose bush burst into bloom like Id never seen before. Hundreds of big white flowers, rich in perfume, hung over the back door, flowed into our yard, and showered the ground with beautiful petals.
My rose bushs revival reminded me of Jesuss parable of the fig tree in Luke 13:69. In Israel, it was customary to give fig trees three years to produce fruit. If they didnt, they were cut down so the soil could be better used. In Jesuss story, a gardener asks his boss to give one particular tree a fourth year to produce. In context (vv. 15), the parable implies this: The Israelites hadnt lived as they should, and God could justly judge them. But God is patient and had given extra time for them to turn to Him, be forgiven, and bloom.
God wants all people to flourish and has given extra time so that they can. Whether we are still journeying toward faith or are praying for unbelieving family and friends, His patience is good news for all of us.
Right before the words of todays passage, Jesus described how His coming causes division between those who accept Jesus and the new reality He brings and those who reject Him (Luke 12:4956). Words like these could have led some to interpret tragedies like lives lost in a collapsed tower (13:4) as Gods judgment. But Jesus rejected this way of thinking (v. 5), teaching that we should not condemn others, but instead look at ourselves. The parable of the barren fig tree (vv. 69) illustrates that although God is merciful and has given the world extra time to turn to Him (v. 9), a choice to live in Him must be made. Thats the only way to live fruitfully.
How can you, instead of condemning others, focus more deeply on your response to Christ?