America’s Breadbasket

The United States has a lot of the best farmland in the world. The Midwest contains some of the richest soil anywhere. Some corn fields in Indiana, Illinois and Iowa produce more calories per acre than any other crop anywhere. The only soils that come close are in the Ukraine and the humid Pampas of Argentina. Growing up in Indiana I knew this, but a recent vacation gave me a strong reminder.

Several years ago, Paulette and I took a dream vacation.  With two other couples, we toured Yellowstone and the Grand Tetons National Parks in a rented van. We started our journey in Spearfish, South Dakota. We saw a seemingly never-ending quilt of soybean and corn fields; both were green, but the quilt pattern came from the fact that the corn tassels gave the corn fields a slightly rust tinge. The quilt pattern only had the two colors.  Since the land in western Iowa and eastern Nebraska is so rich, very little is devoted to lesser value crops such as wheat and hay.

 As we were driving along, I marveled at the bountiful crops and felt proud. Seeing all the grain also made me recall the “amber waves of grain” line in the wonderful song “America the Beautiful.” I realized that gratefulness rather than pride was the correct emotion. I had done nothing to create this wonderful soil, and it truly is a gift. We are in this wonderful land through God’s grace and not by our own doing.

Finally, I realized that the same is true in our lives as Christians. We sometimes become prideful, self-righteous, or judgmental of others, rather than thankful for God’s grace bestowed on our undeserving selves.  Read Romans 3:21-28 and remember: God loves YOU unconditionally.

 Jim

Adapted from Jim’s post on August 28 2016

About joyocala

Blog posts by the saints of JOY Lutheran Church in Ocala. We are excited to do this ministry together and to share God's unconditional love with all who read these messages.
This entry was posted in Uncategorized. Bookmark the permalink.

Leave a comment