Tulips and Tulips
I come from the land of tulips, wooden shoes and windmills. Nowadays, the wooden shoes are almost gone as they are too uncomfortable. And most windmills are museums or kept up by some Stiftung to retain their historic value. Tulips are still very much a thing though. Most tulips that will be flooding the supermarkets in the next months will have been produced in the Netherlands. With big trucks, they are sold to Coop, Migros, Lidl, Aldi and distributed all over Switzerland. For the Dutch wholesalers, Switzerland is an attractive market; good prices and a great payment morale. Probably, the picture you get in your mind when I say ‘tulips’ is the wrong one when we are talking about a bunch of tulips you can buy in the supermarket. They have never seen any soil or dirt in their lifetime. In huge tulip brooding greenhouses, the tulip bulbs or ‘Schwiebeln’ are put on big tables, with their bottoms in fertilized water. The bulb is activated by the temperature and the water, starts growing roots and produces a tulip at the top. When it is about to open up, it is cut off and put into a bunch with other tulips. But what about the tulip fields then that are widely advertised and shown as a tourist magnet for you to come to the Lowlands in April or May? These fields are not to produce tulip flowers. They are to produce tulip bulbs. As soon as the tulips reach full bloom, the flowers are cut off and thrown away. Over the next months, the one tulip bulb with the decapitated stem starts multiplying in the ground and grows four, five, six new bulbs onto the old ‘mother’ bulb. When the process is done, the farmer digs up the bulbs, throws out the mother bulb and prepares the new bulbs to ship all over the world for good money. Production might happen totally differently than you might have imagined! We continually ask God to fill you with the knowledge of his will through all the wisdom and understanding that the Spirit gives,so that you may live a life worthy of the Lord and please him in every way: bearing fruit in every good work, growing in the knowledge of God, being strengthened with all power according to his glorious might so that you may have great endurance and patience (Colossians 1:9-11). Growth in your life – whether spiritual, mental, emotional – might also happen totally different that you have imagined. Like growing through difficulties. Spiritually growing through your experiences in the workplace. Mentally growing through your input at church. Emotionally growing through what your teenagers tell you. If we think that the only way that God teaches us is through Bible study and listening to sermons – how good and worthwhile these are – think again! I’ve heard God speak through my agnostic brother-in-law. God has taught me things in the workplace about following Jesus, that I’ve never heard anywhere else. The ‘production’ of godliness in our lives can take many shapes and forms. What it takes from our side is a willingness to grow and flourish and see God at work in many different places and speak to us through many different channels.