Consider the Lilies: Lessons From Nature on Growing Again After LossSample

Consider the Lilies: Lessons From Nature on Growing Again After Loss

DAY 6 OF 7

Choose Your Companions Well

Zinnias are companion plants. They make good garden buddies because they ward off pests and attract pollinators. If you want your flowers to stay healthy all summer long, plant zinnias among them. Want to keep the bugs away from your veggies? Edge your garden with these good plant friends.

If you want to flourish after loss, it’s important to look for zinnia friends, too. Cultivate relationships that ward off despair and encourage hope. Transplant yourself beside new folks if necessary. Dedicate time to walking closely with your Friend, Jesus, who offers you a listening ear for your grief and a strong hand of guidance as you build your new life.

We all know how important it is to weed the garden beds. You may have heard the verse, “Bad company corrupts good character” (1 Corinthians 15:33, niv). While you take care to avoid those who’d make your sorrow more difficult, be sure to surround yourself with good companions too. Even in the tough, arid soil of grief, your life’s garden can grow. Beauty can bloom around you as you plant yourself beside those who can help you thrive again.

Day 5Day 7

About this Plan

Consider the Lilies: Lessons From Nature on Growing Again After Loss

When Job wrestled with questions in his grief, God invited him to consider the wonders of nature. God has written his redeeming love into every part of his creation. If you’re struggling to remember God’s goodness or see his guiding hand in the midst of your pain, take this week to listen to creation’s song of resilience and resurrection. You, too, can grow and flourish after loss.

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