Hello ,
I grew up in a family that worked hard in the spring time to harvest sap from maple trees fro maple syrup. I really like the following illustration from Michele Straubel of Red Lake, MN:
You're in the grocery store, walking down the cereal aisle. The next item on your list is pancake syrup. You glance up at the tiny $7 bottle of pure maple syrup on the top shelf. You pause-in this economy?-and with a sigh you grab the larger $3 bottle of Hungry Jack.
When it
comes to syrup, there's a reason the real stuff is pricy. Through a slow and painstaking process, the traditional Native American art of maple sugaring takes large quantities of an essentially useless substance and turns it into something worth stretching your grocery budget to buy.
First, the workers venture deep into the woods-called the "sugar bush"-and use hand drills to make small holes in
the trunks of maple trees. A metal tube called a "spile" is tapped into each hole, and a bucket is hung on each spile. The sap that begins to drip into the buckets is thin and clear, like water, with only a hint of sweetness. On a good day, 50 trees will yield 30 - 40 gallons of sap.
As the buckets fill, they are emptied into large kettles that sit over an open fire. The sap comes to a slow
boil. As it boils, its water content is reduced and its sugars are concentrated. Hours later, it has developed a rich flavor and golden-brown color. Then it must be strained several times to remove impurities before being reheated, bottled, and graded for quality. The end product of those 30 - 40 gallons of sap? One gallon of maple syrup. No wonder it's so expensive!
When we came to Christ, like raw, unfinished sap, we could have been tossed aside as worthless. But God knew what he could make of us. He sought and found us, and his skillful hands are transforming us into something precious, sweet and useful. The long and often painful refining process brings forth a pure, genuine disciple easily distinguished from cheap imitations.*
Day by day, moment by moment, God is transforming those that allow Him to have control of their lives.
Have a great day and God bless!
Pastor Mike / The Open Word