Guest Interview: Michele Morin

On Wednesdays in my Meeting God in the Garden series, I will feature guest interviews with other Christian gardeners.  In today’s guest interview, I want to introduce you to my fellow blogger and gardener, Michele Morin.

Guest Interview #2

Michele Morin is the wife of a patient husband, Mum to four young men and a daughter-in-love (soon to be two!), and Gram to one adorable grandboy (with another on the way!). Her days are spent homeschooling, reading piles of books, and, in the summer, tending a beautiful (but messy) garden and canning the vegetables.  She loves to teach the Bible, and is privileged to gather around a table with the women of her church. She blogs at Living Our Days where she writes about the books she is reading, the grace she is receiving, and the lessons from God’s Word that she is trusting.

Q: Tell us about your own garden. What is your favorite kind of gardening (flower, vegetable, container, etc.) and why?

I am mainly a grower of vegetables, an enterprise which started during my first year of marriage with the utilitarian motives of bolstering our grocery budget and providing fresh food during the summer months.  Of course, I knew nothing about gardening, so weeding was a white-knuckle affair in which I was certain that I was about to accidentally uproot my whole garden, and the amount of work that went into canning the vegetables came as a complete surprise to me.

Somewhere along the way, I realized that gardening is also an avenue for creating and enjoying beauty, so when I’m hunkered down between the rows of green beans, I’m also enjoying the velvety texture of their leaves. I’m taking in the majesty of towering sunflowers and tracing the vivid green of twining pumpkin vines.

Q: What spiritual lessons has God taught you through gardening?

What happens in my garden every year is an ordinary miracle.  Sprouting seeds are quite unremarkable, really, and yet the mystery of that everyday wonder never becomes commonplace to me.  Proximity to the soil, awareness of seasonal patterns of frost and heat, rain and shine remind me that God is responsible for the results.  Ultimately, He is the Gardener. My job is to be faithful – not perfect.  This puts to rest some of my tendency toward ceaseless striving  – and it may mean settling for a B+ in some aspect of life in which I’d truly love to get an A.

My job is to be faithful, not perfect. #gardening #faithfulness via @micheledmorin Click To Tweet

And as I’m weeding around the radishes, I’m probably pondering the tenacity of those pesky weeds– all so hardy and persistent that if I don’t get the roots out, they’ll be back for sure.  I want to let my own roots grow deep into truth, to exercise that same persistence, but at the same time, to beware of all the distractions that want to take up residence in my heart.  Life on this broken ground means that good habits take plenty of regular tending, while bad habits tend to be persistent and deep-rooted things.

Q: In this year’s gardening season, what challenges do you face? How do they correlate with your faith?

This gardening season holds a graduation, a wedding, and the birth of a new grandbaby.  My family is growing in ways that leave me breathless, and yet, truly, have very little to do with me.  Two middle sons who will be in college this fall, will appreciate jars of home grown spaghetti sauce on their shelves, and my oldest son’s new baby will be eating pureed green beans in the blink of an eye.

Ironically, in this season of the empty-ing nest, my garden may be bigger than ever, a means of giving to my much-loved family.  It’s also a metaphor for the way in which I’m trusting God to teach me the rhythms of holding on and letting go, of nourishing others from a distance, all the time realizing that, while it’s not my provision that matters most of all, I can trust Him for help in keeping pace with new (and delightful!) demands.

In the garden I am reminded of God's abundance. #garden #abundance via @micheledmorin Click To Tweet

In growing and preserving vegetables, I am reminded that God is the very essence of abundance.  With my bare hands I pile up the rich garden humus around the tomato plants and recall that I, too, am sustained by significant soil with its buried nutrients, and I am encouraged to trust for grace to enrich the lives of others.

***

Guest Interview with Michele Morin

Thank you Michele for this guest interview!  Michele Morin has written several other gardening posts. To read them, click on the links below:

A Watered Garden in Time of Drought

Diligence and Focus: Thoughts From the Garden

Abundance and Harvest: More Thoughts From the Garden

Parenting Past the Mid-Point: More Thoughts From the Garden

Michele’s social media links:

Facebook  Twitter  Instagram  Blog

Questions for reflection:

How is gardening an avenue of creating and enjoying beauty for you?

What ordinary miracles have you witnessed in a garden?

How does a garden remind you of God’s abundance?

Gardening Interview with Michele Morin

Guest Interview with Michele Morin

If you liked this post, I would appreciate your shares on social media!

This post may be linked up at these linkups.

If you make a purchase through the provided links, I receive a small commission at no extra cost to you. Thank you in advance for supporting my writing ministry!

My weekly newsletter Tea on Tuesdays is delivered at 3:00 p.m. Central time every Tuesday.  I write an exclusive devotion for you each week that I share with you first.

To receive the newsletter, please subscribe below. I can’t wait to share personally with you each week!

Want to know more about me before you sign up? You can read my story here and learn more about my books here. By signing up, you are agreeing to the terms of my privacy policy.
%d bloggers like this: