God’s Patient Work Continues

“Those are a couple of fire-on-the-mountain bushes,” the gardener said to me. She looked after the common areas around our townhouse community—mowing the grass, pruning the bushes, and generally keeping the grounds looking healthy and well kept. But each household is responsible to take care of the garden area next to their own unit. As a new resident, I decided to start by first asking the gardener to identify the different plants for me, and she was happy to oblige.  

Of course, I recognized the large rhododendron bush by the front door, and the roses at the side of the house. But the fire-on-the-mountain bushes—more formally called pieris japonica—were new to me. How aptly named, I thought, for most of their leaves were dark green, but the new growth was a brilliant red, topping the plant like fire on a mountain.

Over the years, I’ve watched as my fire-on-the-mountain has continued to flourish. Each spring, I welcome new white flowers and delight in new red leaves that turn green as they mature. But three years ago, after a hard winter, one of the bushes had clearly suffered. That winter had been so cold that the wind seemed to blow right through the house, and ice formed on the inside of our living room windows. The following spring, instead of fire on the mountain, the top third of one of our bushes looked like mainly dead branches.

“I’ll come by and pull out that bush for you,” said one of my neighbours. The previous year, he had used a sturdy length of rope and his pick-up truck to pull out a large plant of heather that had died. But I wasn’t ready for him to do that to my ailing fire-on-the-mountain just yet.

“Thank you,” I said, “but first I’m going to trim away the dead branches, and see if the bush might come back. Maybe I can save it.”

So I pruned away the dead wood, and carefully rearranged the still living branches so their leaves would fill in some of the bare spots.

“That does look better,” said my neighbour, but I could tell he wasn’t yet convinced that the bush still deserved its place in my garden.

Yet I continued to tend my bush all that summer, and the winters since then haven’t been as harsh. This spring, my bush once again lived up to its name as fire-on-the-mountain. Its evergreen leaves were once again crowned with new red growth. With patience, judicious pruning, and some gentle work, I had saved it. My fire-on-the-mountain had been restored!

As I reflect on Jesus as Savior, I’m grateful for his birth, life, death, resurrection, and ascension. I’m grateful for God’s patience, gentle work, and judicious pruning in my life. I am saved—out of hard winter to a new season, out of the molasses of grief to moving forward, from what looks like death to renewed life. I am saved by the power of God, the work of Christ, and the new life of the Spirit. Thanks be to God!

For it is by grace you have been saved, through faith—and this is not from yourselves, it is the gift of God. —Ephesians 2:8

An earlier version of this piece was published for Asian American Women on Leadership.


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3 responses

  1. schroedereh Avatar
    schroedereh

    Beautifully said, April! Coming out of the „molasses of grief“ is hard work!

    1. You know it, Elfrieda! But God is good, and I’m grateful that we are surrounded by a wide circle of support.

  2. Kathy Yamasaki Avatar
    Kathy Yamasaki

    What a wonderful story of compassion, consistency, resilience and flourishing and not only for your “fire on the mountain” bush!! It looks beautiful.

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Faith and Hope with April Yamasaki

I write, edit, teach, preach, and mentor in a variety of venues, platforms, and publications. The common thread? To encourage and inspire people of all ages to live with faith and hope. I’d love for you to join me!

In all the challenges, joys, and ordinary moments of daily life, God’s mercies never fail. They are new every morning (Lamentations 3:22-23).