• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Givens Creative

Life at the intersection of faith, nature, history and art

  • Home
  • About
  • Blog
  • Spiritual Direction
  • Publications
  • CCG Music
  • Contact
  • Show Search
Hide Search

God, Grace, Heirloom Tomatoes and My Father’s Garden

Steve · July 15, 2012 · 10 Comments

Ferguson Farmer's Market, by Steve Givens

“Taste and see that the Lord is good.” (Psalm 34:8)

The sad truth is, it seems to me on this early Sunday morning, that I have spent far too much of my life not realizing how good the Lord tastes. It’s an odd notion for the psalmist to make, I admit. How is it (the wonder and mystery of the Eucharist aside) we can go about tasting the Lord?

The glorious truth is, we have been given a bounty in the tastes and colors and scents that come from the gardens and farms of God’s good creation. What better and further proof, if we have need of that, of God’s presence and action in the world than that of an heirloom tomato just hours from being on the vine? This misshapen and seemingly mis-colored fruit/vegetable (argue about that amongst yourselves!) is as difficult for our modern sensibilities to grasp as is the presence of the creator. We pass it by in the stores and markets because it doesn’t match our expectations of what a tomato is supposed to look like. But taste it…take it in…make it part of you…and the difference becomes obvious. And we find ourselves saying, “So that’s what a tomato is supposed to taste like!” It is our experience of the heirloom tomato, like our experience of God, that makes it real.

My dad, right, and mom, center, around the table with friends, circa 1950.

My father, who rarely darkened the doorway of a church as an adult, seemed to know this well. For many years when I was a child, he grew a totally organic garden in a small corner of our backyard in North St. Louis. He composted our garbage. He spent his evenings poring over copies of “Organic Gardening” and dreaming of a bigger plot of land than the roughly 15-foot-square portion of our yard that bordered our neighbors (the Hennekeses) and the back alley. On top of our no-longer-used swing set, which straddled the patch, he attached a hose and sprinkler so the water would fall gently on the plants below. During the winter he started most of his plants from seed in our basement, illuminated and warmed by a fluorescent lighting fixture and tended to and watered with extreme care and attention. I’m sure he urged me to help and learn, but I was busy with other things.

But for a man who once considered a call to ministry as a teenager, I can only imagine that his garden became his connection to something sacred – the tilled and well-manured earth as an experience of a God who cared enough to become one of us and walk around in our shoes and experience the good earth’s aromas and flavors and vibrant hues. This is how I choose to remember my father. When his depression and drinking drew him away from his garden, I think he grieved the loss of that connection.

And so yesterday we walked the stalls of the Ferguson Farmer’s Market with our good friends, John and Karen and Larry and Dianne, where we chose tomatoes and leeks and green beans and corn and zucchini and onions and fresh pasta. We took it all to Larry and Dianne’s and spent the rest of the day cutting and peeling and cleaning and cooking (and drinking and laughing and singing). Under the grilling mastery of Larry and the careful guidance of John, our resident chef, who added not only his art but also fresh herbs from his and Karen’s garden, we together created a feast that took hours to eat. Slow food in a fast food world. Communion with friends and God. Grace.

Ferguson Farmer's Market, by Steve Givens

And I thought of my father, hunched over in the garden, urging the tender shoots of onions along the fence, coaxing the peppers and tomatoes and beans to life, cutting fresh lettuce and pulling carrots for dinner. A moment of connection between God, man and earth. Providing for his family in a way that transcended a paycheck and the frustrations of life delivering mail for the federal government. A holy, organic, authentic moment of grace. A moment of knowing that this life is good and tasty and so is the God who gives it.

Nature, Spirituality creation, faith, Nature, sacred, Spirituality

Recent Posts

  • Considering Holy Week
  • Celebrating 40 Years of Living Faith
  • Remembering Our Belovedness
  • Step by Step: The Journey of Lent  
  • Hey, Death: No Hard Feelings

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

Check your inbox or spam folder to confirm your subscription.

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Sandy says

    July 15, 2012 at 8:42 am

    Just wonderful! What great memories.

  2. Jim Davis says

    July 15, 2012 at 9:06 am

    You always “hit the mark” and help bring back memories…

  3. Dianne says

    July 15, 2012 at 9:15 am

    Thanks for some great memories, miss the good times!

  4. John C. says

    July 15, 2012 at 2:56 pm

    Wonderfully written, Steve. Friends and a feast…church takes many forms. As one of my favorite songwriters (guess who) once wrote; “Looking for a little bit of God’s mercy, I found living proof.”

  5. Judi says

    July 15, 2012 at 7:30 pm

    A lovely reflection…..tonight we ate our first heirloom tomato, grown in our garden, and then we went out and picked some more. We will be sharing them with friends soon. Thanks, Steve.

  6. Pat says

    July 16, 2012 at 5:48 am

    Good morning Steve…Thank you for your thoughtful reflection…peace and good (eating!)

  7. Steve says

    July 16, 2012 at 5:24 pm

    Great story … beautifully written … and while it hasn’t quite nudged me back to church, it made me very hungry
    …

  8. Kathy says

    July 21, 2012 at 7:25 am

    I love this story and the picture of your parents. This is the first story I have read on your blog. It brought me back to my child hood and my grandparents. My Grand dad drank Stag and I have many fond memories of my grandparents. He too drank too much and I remember that their life seemed very hard. Any ways, I could go on and on, but most of all thank you for the connection between tomatoes and God.

  9. Mary Ellen says

    August 4, 2012 at 2:52 pm

    Steve,
    Do you know this Denise Levertov poem?

    O Taste and See

    The world is
    not with us enough.
    O taste and see

    the subway Bible poster said,
    meaning The Lord, meaning
    if anything all that lives
    to the imagination’s tongue,

    grief, mercy, language,
    tangerine, weather, to
    breather them, bite,
    savor, chew, swallow, transform,

    into our flesh, our
    deaths, crossing the street, plum, quince,
    living in the orchard and being

    hungry, and plucking
    the fruit.

    I had the good fortune to take a class from her during my senior year of college.

  10. admin says

    August 4, 2012 at 7:56 pm

    I don’t, but it’s beautiful, Mary Ellen. Thanks….

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Primary Sidebar

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

Check your inbox or spam folder to confirm your subscription.

Categories

  • A (Very) Short Story
  • Being There
  • Blessings
  • Book Reviews
  • Chemotherapy
  • Christmas
  • Creative Spirit
  • Creativity
  • Games We Played
  • Guest Bloggers
  • History
  • House concerts
  • Ignatian Spirituality
  • Leadership
  • Music
  • My Soundtrack
  • Nature
  • Notes from a Lecture
  • Photography
  • Poetry
  • Prayer
  • Scripture
  • Songwriters
  • Spirituality
  • Sports and Culture
  • Stem Cell Transplant
  • STLToday Faith Perspectives
  • Today's Word
  • Travel
  • Two Minutes
  • Uncategorized
  • Vocation & Call

Recent Comments

  • Pat Butterworth on Hey, Death: No Hard Feelings
  • Steve on Stepping Out of the Boat and Into a Bolder Lent
  • Marianne Lame on Stepping Out of the Boat and Into a Bolder Lent
  • John Caravelli on Money, Money Everywhere and Not a Buck to Spend
  • Steve on What’s in Your Suitcase?

About the Author

Steve Givens is a retreat and spiritual director and a widely published writer on issues of faith and spirituality. He is also a musician, composer and singer who lives in St. Louis, Mo., with his wife, Sue. They have two grown and married children and five grandchildren.

Read More >>>

Recent Posts

  • Considering Holy Week
  • Celebrating 40 Years of Living Faith
  • Remembering Our Belovedness
  • Step by Step: The Journey of Lent  
  • Hey, Death: No Hard Feelings

Recent Posts

  • Considering Holy Week
  • Celebrating 40 Years of Living Faith
  • Remembering Our Belovedness
  • Step by Step: The Journey of Lent  
  • Hey, Death: No Hard Feelings
  • Home
  • About
  • Blog
  • Spiritual Direction
  • Publications
  • CCG Music
  • Contact

Reach out to connect with Steve Send an E-mail

Copyright © 2025 · Built by Jon Givens · Log in