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Home » editorials

Gardening for the Soul

Submitted by Harmonist staff on October 8, 2009 – 12:07 am3 Comments

japanesegardenportlandoregonBy Norman Wirzba

Gardening is never simply about gardens. It is work that reveals the meaning and character of humanity and is an exercise and demonstration of who we take ourselves and creation to be. The garden is the most direct and practical site where we can learn the art and discipline of being creatures. Here we concretely and practically see how we relate to the natural world, to other creatures, and ultimately to the Creator. We discover whether we are prepared to honor these relations by nurture and care and celebration, or despise and abuse them. Gardens are a microcosm of the universe in which all the living and nonliving elements of life meet, elements ranging from geological formations and countless biochemical reactions to human inventiveness and age-old traditions about cuisine and beauty. When and how we garden gives expression to how we think we fit in the world. Through the many ways we produce and consume food, we bear witness to our ability or failure to gratefully and humbly receive creation as a gift from God.

To garden effectively is to bring human living into fairly close, appreciative, and sympathetic alignment with the life going on in the garden. It requires us to know a particular plot of land and understand its potential, and then work harmoniously with it. To garden is to unseat oneself as the center of primary importance, and to instead turn one’s life into various forms of service that will strengthen and maintain the many memberships that make up the garden. It is to give up the much-trumpeted goal of modern and postmodern life—individual autonomy—and instead live the life of care and responsible interdependence. This is what the biblical command to “till and keep” the garden means. When we garden well, devoting ourselves to the strengthening of the memberships of creation, personal ego and ambition gradually recede from the lines of sight so that the blessings and glory of God can shine through what we see. When we serve a garden well by learning to calibrate our schedules and desires to complement gardening realities, life has the chance to thrive and smell and taste really good.

Gardening, besides being a practical, life-nurturing task, is also always a spiritual activity. In it people attempt to make visible and tasty what is good, beautiful, and even holy. Every act of gardening presupposes and embodies a way of relating to creation, a way that invariably invokes moral and spiritual decisions. Though membership in a garden is a given, how we will take our place in the membership is not. Our aim must be to develop into good gardeners, gardeners who work harmoniously among the flows of life. This means that besides vegetables, flowers, and fruit, gardeners are themselves undergoing a spiritual cultivation into something beautiful and sympathetic and healthy. A caring, faithful, and worshipping humanity is one of the garden’s most important crops.

Norman Wirzba is Research Professor of Theology, Ecology, and Rural Life at Duke Divinity School. These excerpts are from his book Food and Faith: A Theology of Eating, forthcoming from Cambridge University Press.

This article originally appeared on pbs.org.

3 Comments »

  • Living Entity says:

    I really enjoyed this article. I never really thought that deeply about gardening before, but this article really deepened my conception of how gardening is such a sattvic activity that it induces the mind to evolve spiritually.
    Great article!
    I am trying to become a better gardener.
    I have some seedlings coming up for my Fall/Winter garden.
    Visualize beautiful gopis girls in Vrindavan working their gardens and singing songs of the adventures of Sri Krishna.
    Gopis are also gardeners.

  • Citta Hari dasa says:

    I love this article. Mahaprabhu asks his followers to become gardeners like him, and by his grace we can. Externally, to work the land is an inherently wholesome undertaking, and heals the gardener in the process on both physical and psychological levels. I have found that it’s very hard to have a crazy mind while working with plants outdoors in the fresh air. Tuning in to the cycles of the seasons and the elements of sun, rain, wind, etc. gives one a sense of stability and place even while those elements are busy shifting. And of course the outward gardening experience of attentiveness to the needs of the plants runs parallel with our inner cultivation of the bhakti lata. Few things in life are anywhere near as satisfying.

  • Babhru says:

    What a delightful article! Having done a great deal of gardening for over 40 years, I find much to like in this article. I think my gardening has helped shape me as a person and as a devotee. Like Citta Hari, I have found that working with the plants and the dirt has helped me so much that I often wonder if I can be happy without them. And I have also always liked Mahaprabhu’s identity as a gardener. I certainly look forward to reading Wirzba’s book.

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