1At that very time there were some present who told him about the Galileans
whose blood Pilate had mingled with their sacrifices. 2He asked them, "Do
you think that because these Galileans suffered in this way they were worse
sinners than all other Galileans? 3No, I tell you; but unless you repent,
you will all perish as they did. 4Or those eighteen who were killed when
the tower of Siloam fell on them--do you think that they were worse
offenders than all the others living in Jerusalem? 5No, I tell you; but
unless you repent, you will all perish just as they did." 6Then he told
this parable: "A man had a fig tree planted in his vineyard; and he came
looking for fruit on it and found none. 7So he said to the gardener, 'See
here! For three years I have come looking for fruit on this fig tree, and
still I find none. Cut it down! Why should it be wasting the soil?' 8He
replied, 'Sir, let it alone for one more year, until I dig around it and
put manure on it. 9If it bears fruit next year, well and good; but if not,
you can cut it down.'"
Step 1--Initial Diagnosis: "Cutting Down" Others
Jesus warns his disciples and all those of us who read the newspaper and
think they have some kind of inside track with God to think again. The
disciples had concluded that the Galileans who had suffered under Pilate
were "worse sinners" (v. 2) than other Galileans. Hence their disaster was
just deserts. Or, the disciples concluded, the eighteen who had died under
the tower of Siloam were "more guilty" than anyone else in Jerusalem. Why
else would they have suffered (v. 4). Might we also too easily conclude
that because we don't suffer catastrophes and distresses like other people
do, we must be have better ranking with God. Others are only getting what
they have coming to them. Serves them right! How especially appealing
this temptation is to us modern-day Christians, especially us in the
affluent West, who disparage other peoples for their poverty as being
"self-inflicted." Even in our daily relationships, we may too easily "cut
down" someone's reputation with a quick curt remark or a disparaging
comparison. Others just don't measure up to our high standards and our
great goodness, or so we claim with condescending smugness.
Step 2--Advanced Diagnosis: Starved for Nutrition
Jesus calls such comparison practices "fruitless." And fruitless trees are
the result of a basic defect-- they are without good nutrition, in need of
quality fertilizer. When people seek to obtain their vitality from the
false fertilizers of this world (which promise to give life), they cannot
bear fruit pleasing to their "owner." False fertilizers come in varying
brands--wealth, prestige, status, vainglory and pride. All of these
fertilizer's are deceiving because they promise a goodness they cannot
deliver. Our sense of self-worth is based on our own selves and by trying
to make ourselves look good by comparison and at the expense of others.
Whatever the brand "x" fertilizer we are using, all lead to starving us at
the roots of our being from any nutrition that can sustain our beings, let
alone produce any quality fruit.
Step 3--Final Diagnosis: Cut Down, Trashed
A tree which doesn't bear fruit is worthless to its owner, so it gets cut
down and trashed. God's shearing verdict is evident in Jesus' parable:
"Cut it down, why should it be wasting the soil!" (v. 7) Those who have
trashed others and the owner's better graces are themselves trashed. We
have been betrayed by our bad faith in fertilizers. Thinking all along
that they would give us life, instead they gave us death. Serves us right,
though we are not so prone to make that judgment with all its deadly
consequences.
Step 4--Initial Prognosis: Revived By the Gardener Jesus
Jesus, the gentle gardener, intervenes on behalf of worthless trees, not
just pleading for mercy, not just offering to tend to the gardening a bit
more in the hopes of sparking some fruit. Rather, He promises the owner
that He will "dig it and dung it" (v. 8). But the cure of the gardener
Jesus is quite radical. He offers his own body as our new source of
fertilizer, becoming "dung" (dead matter) in the form of a crucified body
on the cross. He takes our dead and trashed existences, and in exchange
gives us himself as the new source of life. His tree allows our trees to
find new soil, new roots.
Step 5--Advanced Prognosis: Nourished anew
Transplanted into the crucified and resurrected body of Jesus, we are
revived and truly nourished. Our soil has allowed us to become the better
produce of the grace given us in Jesus. Joyfully, we trust our new
fertilizer in Jesus, as we are watered (in our baptism) and enriched in our
nutrients (at the feast of Jesus' body and blood). This new fertilizer, we
soon find, serves us right, and keeps us growing rightly. Part of the way
that we grow better through faith is by the way we now get to look upon the
tragedies and calamities happening to others (but perhaps not to us).
These are moments for our "repentance," occasions to cherish the
nourishment and revitalization that comes through our good fertilizer, and
to abandon the false fertilizers that have led us to the point of
perishing.
Step 6--Final Prognosis: Bearing Good Fruit
With Jesus' own body and blood surging through us, we become like Him. We
start to act like Him. We begin to bear fruit. We have an attitude change
toward others. Being freely forgiven, we practice forgiveness. Being
unconditionally accepted, we practice unconditional acceptance, in stark
contrast to the "trashing" we had been doing. Being so lovingly tended and
cared for, we love and care for others, even and especially those we have
previously condemned. This is the fruit for which our Father comes
looking, and through our good fertilizer we can now deliver.