Ants, and the Intimate Kingdom

The other day I was watching a PBS special about mountain climbing, and while most of it didn’t engage me, I was captivated by a certain painting of men climbing the side of a mountain.  Each man was standing on another person’s shoulders, like a living ladder, going higher and higher into heaven.  The commenter said it symbolized all the lives lost throughout history in the pursuit of reaching the highest peaks of the world.

For some reason I kept thinking about this image, and how it relates to the Lord’s Bride – or the “Intimate Kingdom” as I’ve been calling it here. Like mountain climbers, she is a people with an unexplainable and insatiable desire for being closer to Christ, and where He is, no matter how high, dangerous or costly it is.  Except that unlike the quest to reach a mountaintop, this is not a race to be the first to plant a flag!  Nor is it trying to reach a spiritual pinnacle separate from others!  Rather, what I saw was an intimate and accountable building-block structure of heavenly people built into, and upon each other for a unified purpose.  Everyone is connected via His life, and it includes mothers, fathers, and older brothers and sisters in Christ who come before to encourage and carry on their shoulders those spiritually younger to reach higher heights, and more safely, than they themselves have or ever will.

ants-tower2Our Teacher, the Ants

Have you ever seen ants link themselves together?  There are certain ones that do this to make living structures such as bridges, rafts, and towers. It’s amazing! (there are many YouTube videos about them).  When I saw the painting of a human tower on T.V., I thought of the ants.  They are such a stunning picture from creation of having a single mind and heart, and what it looks like when people become connected together in love via a revelation of Christ in each other for a purpose higher than themselves!

The Upside Down Kingdom

The most critical and foundational aspect to what I’m seeing in this “living ladder,” however, is what is at the bottom supporting the entire structure.  It is Jesus Christ and His unique work on the Cross of loving us.  It is His mind that is the mind of the whole, and probably nothing says it better than this passage:

Have this mind in you, which was also in Christ Jesus, who was in very nature God, but did not consider this to be something to use for His own advantage.  He emptied himself by taking the form of a servant, in the likeness of man; and He humbled Himself by becoming obedient to the point of death – even to death on a cross.  Phil. 2:5-8

It is this humility that is most striking about the Lord’s “Intimate Kingdom!”  It is how He is building His Church.  Each person operates with a restful confidence that when someone who is connected to them makes it to the top, they will effectively become a tower, or a bridge, for the world to see and experience Christ!

I pray that they may all be one, and united with us…
That the world may believe that you sent me…
John 17:21

Unlike the tower of Babel which is a joint effort for corporate, temporal control, and leads to division, the Lord’s Kingdom is a joint effort for revealing Christ to the world, and is characterized by an unshakeable oneness and sense of eternal purpose.

In Love!
Pamela

“And the multitude of them that believed
were of one heart and of one soul.” 
  Acts 4:32

ant-collage

“If the Lord can get but two of His children,
in whom His life is full and free,

to live on the basis of that life…
then He has an open way.”

~ T.Austin Sparks

For more, see “The Growth of the Church” by T. Austin Sparks

Visiting a Real Secret Garden

We dance round in a ring and suppose, but the secret sits in the middle and knows. – Robert Frost

Charlie and Cheryl live on a somewhat remote, rural property in Alabama where they do organic gardening, chickens and various permaculture projects—all on just 3 acres. They call their place “the Secret Garden.” On one of our past winter travels, I jumped all over the chance to get a tour.

I learned when they bought their property eight years ago, it was dilapidated. There was no garden. There was barely a house. Friends and family thought they were crazy for taking on such a huge project but now it’s flourishing with life! Organic life too, the way it was originally intended. For being late November, it was surprising to see so many things blooming and harvestable.

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Speaking of organic. As they were showing us around, we paused at a row of Bok Choy. (in the cabbage family) It was riddled with bug-chewed holes. My husband commented how most people wouldn’t eat imperfect vegetables like that. But informed people and cultures trust such imperfections. It’s a sign the food is ‘real.’

“A real insight into true theology!” Charlie responded.

“Oh, how so?” Our interest was piqued. We were early into our walk and didn’t know this man was a thinker along this line!

Charlie explained when the Bible talks about perfection, and “being perfect,” it doesn’t mean being flawless. (Matthew 5:48, for example) The word and idea behind it is maturity. This means, despite the often fatalistic mentality otherwise, “perfection” in this life is possible!

The beauty and simplicity of this truth really opened up to me. It’s in such a stark contrast to my experience with man’s religion—the type that makes spiritual life complicated. Their focus is on doing things to please God and be useful to Him. But nature teaches us growth and maturity comes when we simply “abide” in Christ’s life, and “let nature take its course.”  Artificial and toxic methods to being healthy and perfect (you can fill in the blank here with a list of things) is to tamper with, and frustrate the outworking of divine, natural life that comes by faith, and peacefully yielding to His life inside us.  

As for the “bruises, worm holes and dirt” of organic life? Nature teaches us to be okay with this, too. There is no fear of being disqualified. For those who abide in God’s garden in the midst of this world, getting a little dirty is part of what happens sometimes. This is not an excuse to sin. It’s just that our weaknesses and failures are more a sign of being real than anything! The most life-giving people are not those who hide their “battle scars,” but despite them, and even with them, go on to grow and mature as they were intended.

Life and life more abundant

“And the secret garden bloomed and bloomed and every morning revealed new miracles.” – Frances Hodgson Burnett

Another thing about this “secret garden” we toured. It had no sign out front. Charlie and Cheryl don’t seek visitors to their humble place, or even blog for that matter. But somehow people (like us) come to visit them through word-of-mouth.  Some are sick and want to learn how plants can help them. And people in the local area—a staunch bible belt region—are warming up to them, too. In fact, that became evident when we walked around the front yard. About a half-dozen cars drove by during this time span, and each one beeped and waved at Charlie! Charlie told us that every day he walks his land’s perimeter to mediate and pray. When a car passes by, he waves at them. After years of consistently doing this, all the locals started calling him “The Waving Man!”

I thought this was a whimsical example of how no matter how “rural” your life is from the hubbub of activity, simple expressions of love have rippling effects. Even in a “garden enclosed,” God’s life is powerful. It can’t help but overflow walls, spread to remote places, and ultimately win even the hardest of hearts. 

Here’s to “Secret Gardens,” and God’s amazing, abundant life!