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The best Motherā€™s Day present I ever received was a garden shovel. Itā€™s the gift that keeps on giving: digging up our perennial flower gardens in the spring and again in the fall has become a ritual.

As I turn over the earth, mostly I relish the exercise, the rich soil and earthworms, and the sun or wind on my face. In the spring, the anticipation of sprouting seedlings and persistent perennials often energizes my digging, and ordinarily in the fall a sense of fruition motivates me as I put the garden to bed for the winter.

But when the hard ground battles my efforts, when the soil seems exhausted and the earthworms are absent, or when the sun is too hot or the wind too blustery, digging is a burden, and, frustrated, I put the shovel away and wait for a more promising day.

Maybe youā€™re not a gardener and would never consider receiving a shovel as a reason for thanksgiving. Maybe you are unable to wield a shovel because of physical limitations. Or maybe you would much rather read a book. Whatever the case, I believe the Holy Spirit has metaphorical shovels galore with which to bless Godā€™s children.

In Winning the War in Your Mind for Teens, author Craig Groeschel discusses the necessity of confronting lies Satan tells Godā€™s children, not just by trying to change the behavior that results from acting on those lies, but by replacing the lies with Godā€™s truth. He points out that this necessitates creating new neural pathways with the Holy Spiritā€™s guidance ā€œto help us rewire our brains and renew our minds.ā€ Groeschel employs the metaphors of ruts and trenches to make his point: ā€œA rut is typically formed in mud and becomes a nuisance, even a danger. A rut is unintentionally created, has no purpose, and requires repair. A trench is intentionally dug to deliver a necessary resource. A trench has a specific purpose and fixes an existing problem.ā€

The morning after I read Groeschelā€™s words, I woke with a prayer of gratitude: ā€œItā€™s a great day because the kingdom is yours and I am your child.ā€ Wait a minute! What a switch from the rut-like thoughts that had been plaguing me many nights as I lay awake or first thing in the morning before risingā€”worries about family, the church, societal problems, and harrowing situations in Godā€™s beautiful but broken world.

Unbeknownst to me, the Holy Spirit was handing me a shovelā€”a metaphorical one. And so began the digging of a trench. In the nights ahead, or the early morning hours just before I got out of bed, a vague, yet persistent thought lingered: ā€œToday is a great day because ā€¦ .ā€

Each time, an imaginary shovelful of soil was flung aside as I asked the Holy Spirit to fill in the blank and provide the words to complete the sentence. A pattern emerged. The reason each day is a great dayā€”notice the verb tenseā€”is because of God and Godā€™s work in the world. The answers I received didnā€™t focus on my circumstances or those of my family, the church, society, or the world. The focus was and always is on God, first and foremost!

Are you mired in a rut? Is the Holy Spirit handing you a metaphorical shovel with which to dig a trenchā€”one that will become a channel where Godā€™s grace, mercy, and healing will flow? The apostle Paulā€™s words to the Roman Christians assure us even today that, though we are weak and unable to dig new trenches in our own power, the Holy Spirit helps us in our weakness and intercedes for us with ā€œwordless groansā€ (Rom. 8:26). Through the Holy Spiritā€™s intervention, we will experience that ā€œthe mind governed by the Spirit is life and peaceā€ (Rom. 8:6).

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