common sense

"there is no arguing with one who denies first principles"

Tuesday, March 18, 2025

Green Spaces: Seasonal Changes for Life

 

Winter Exposure Should Lead to Big Cleanup

 You can’t hide in winter. The green coverage of summer gives way to dead spaces and ugly holes in the landscapes. Cities can be quite ugly at the granular level. Everyone loves a city scape view from a distance though. Who doesn’t love the overhead photos  of New York City at dusk?

Close Ups

One of the best things about watching a TV show like Blue Bloods is the shots of Manhattan from afar. But zoom in and you’ll see a little more grit and grime. Trash piles up in corners and rats scurry into sewer drains. Modern cities started designing with green space in mind. It brings a touch of nature to an otherwise concrete jungle. Central Park was designed to be a center of urban activity from the beginning. But even the best cared for parks lose their canopies in the winter.

We get accustomed to having some of the uglier elements of life hidden during the lush summers. Even small cities like Tulsa have enough greenery along the highways and downtown parks to cover a lot of unsightliness from a distance. Winter forces us to confront how actually trashy our city is. Once the leaves fall and tall grass dies off, we see the place in a whole new light. Here though, I’m not sure what a normal level of debris is for American cities. 

Trashy Living

Why did I become so concerned with the amount of trash along the side of the road? A more pointed question is this, what’s being done to clean it up?

American cities have gotten dirtier and less functional in my lifetime. I won’t pretend things have never been this bad. All you have to do is watch a movie from the 70’s set in New York to see what real blight looks like. I covered one in my movie review from a week ago. One source (HUD) found that homelessness increased 32% from 2022 to 2024. It’s getting harder to hide the rot.

I think there is a biblical principle at work. We can hide ugly behaviors, attitudes and addictions for a while but exposure is just a season away. Samson served Israel during the time of the judges. He was gifted with incredible strength. In one incident he killed over a thousand Philistines with a donkey’s jawbone. Imagine seeing a thousand dead bodies in one place, talk about blight. Samson had appetites that created the conditions for his downfall. He liked women who didn’t share a covenant with God. It cost him a wife and then a girlfriend. He put his people at risk by taking a Philistine wife and avenging her death.

Blind Spots

I don’t get the idea that Samson hid very well though. His strength was in some ways a covering. It allowed him to live life on his own terms and destroy people who got in his way. God gave him a season. Samson's strength was a promise to his parents because of their covenant with God. Samson was hardly a devout, servant of the Israelites. He seemed very selfish. Despite his flaws, God honored the commitment to Samson’s parents and he honored his vows, for a while. But the covering eventually ran out and Samson’s behavior was exposed.

The best solution is to clean up the messes in life. The scripture convicts us when we let it. We ignore the piles of trash at our peril. The trees and brush we’ve built up around it eventually lose their ability to provide cover. Exposure is sure to come.  But we can avoid the embarrassment of a dumpy façade by renewing our mind each day and letting God’s word change our hearts. We might prefer to live in the warm summer seasons of life, but we need the exposure of winter to bring about change and get rid of the trash.

This doesn’t just refer to hidden sin and addictive behavior either. Maybe your trashy space is laziness or unhealthy eating. It’s no secret that gym memberships spike in the winter. The upcoming summer makes us realize we should lose a few pounds and subtract sugar from the diet. Maybe you need to turn off Netflix and do something creative. TV has a way of numbing our senses. It’s a trap we all fall into some of the time.

 The point is, life gives us these repeating seasonal changes to bring attention to areas that need improvement. It took me multiple winters to stop using tobacco. I tried for a while and failed. I tried again the next year and failed, again. Eventually I made it stick. Thanks to God’s goodness and His constant, gentle, pressure to change. He points to the trash in a loving way and reminds us that it has to go.

Conclusion

In cities and in life, winter exposure reminds us where the ugly spots are. We can’t count on the green spaces to cover up the trash. Exposure is necessary and rewarding, although painful in the short term. For cities the solution is collective action, for us it's individual choice. Don’t go another day without ignoring some debris pile that God has warned you about. The author of Hebrews says it best.

“Therefore we also, since we are surrounded by so great a cloud of witnesses, let us lay aside every weight, and the sin which so easily ensnares us, and let us run with endurance the race that is set before us” (12:1)

 

No comments:

Post a Comment