The Problem with Oak Trees
The Problem with Oak Trees
I have always been infatuated with oak trees. I love them. When we drive through the countryside and I see a majestic oak standing tall in a field with its outstretched branches, something calls to my spirit. I even told my husband that when I die I want to be cremated and placed inside one of those oak tree seedlings so that one day my body will be part of an oak tree. Yes, I know it's a little weird but it’s a thing-- Google it. So, you can imagine my sheer joy when we purchased our home with three glorious white oaks in the front yard and one large one in the back covering most of our grass area. They were beautiful and I just knew this house was meant to be!
Well, if you have never had an oak tree within close proximity to your home, let me tell you a few things about them. First, they do not typically lose their leaves in the fall as most trees do. You get beautiful green trees all through the winter. However, they do lose them in the spring. Once they have finally dropped all of their thousands of tiny little leaves (which are impossible to rake up, by the way) they then sprout little blossoms. These little suckers will look like snow falling for the next few weeks, covering your yard, pool, and everything else in a blanket of green fluff. In the fall, instead of beautiful colorful falling leaves, you will be pummeled by acorns dropping from their branches or being hurled by a passing bird or squirrel that now resides in your tree. In addition, you will now have to purchase a monthly car wash pass because these beautiful trees love to shower you with sap… all… year… long. It will cover your cars, your patio furniture, and your sidewalks with a thin, sticky film. It truly is the gift that keeps giving.
So what’s my point and why am I writing about oak trees for a church blog? Well, God reminds me something about these oak trees every time I pull into my driveway. I had always prayed for a home with oak trees, beautiful and majestic. However, now that I have them, I see that I didn’t know what came with them. We do that with so many things in life, don’t we? We see something that looks so perfect and we desire it. Remember when you were little and wanted a puppy and all you could think about was how much you were going to love it and how fun it would be? But your parents knew all that came with it-- the walks, the chewing, the vet bills, the mess. Now that we are older, maybe it’s a new job, a partner, a child, a car. Maybe it’s influence. And you think that if you just had that, whatever that is, you would be so happy. But do you know what comes with it? Or do you just want the perfect filtered Instagram post version of it?
I am reminded of so many blessings that I once prayed for and have now received. At some point, I am sure I have complained to God, or anybody that would listen, about each of them in some way or another. After two miscarriages and a failed first marriage, I prayed desperately for a solid relationship. When I met my husband who had six children from previous relations, I was so thankful and excited to get to experience what it meant to have a big, ready-made family. Though I wouldn’t change it for the world, I am sure you know that 21-year-old me was a little naïve to the challenges of a blended family. When I wanted to move out of California and God opened every door, I just knew that this would be the adventure of a lifetime. Though I am confident it was the right move and we have found ourselves in an incredible community, it came with some very dark days. Days when the kids have had trouble adjusting to new schools, missing family events, and major milestones with children back home. These have all had me, at times, questioning if we made the right decision.
But I am reminded of my oak trees. Life, the day-to-day living, can be experienced very differently depending on your perspective. I have asked God for so many things that He has blessed me with. He is so faithful and good. But if I lose my perspective on that and start to focus on all of the things that aren’t perfect and tidy, then I find myself in a constant state of discontentment. Always striving and never getting satisfaction from life. Wanting more and becoming unhappy with what I have. Can you believe I actually told my husband we were going to have to cut down that oak tree in the backyard?! Dramatic, I know.
I’m reminded of Solomon. He was the wisest man to have ever lived, builder of the temple, beautiful poet, and national leader-- he was a man who seemed to have it all. Yet, at the end of his life despite having all the property, houses, money, servants, and livestock, he penned these words in Ecclesiastes 2:11, “Yet when I surveyed all that my hands had done and what I had toiled to achieve, everything was meaningless, chasing after the wind; nothing was gained under the sun.”
Solomon lacked an attitude of gratitude for his blessings. He had been given everything he had desired but it was not enough. Trying to live a life that is measured by comforts and as little inconvenience as possible will always leave you striving for more, unsatisfied with what you have or where you are. But focusing on God, what He’s doing in and through you, will bring perspective. 1 Thessalonians 5:16-18 reminds us “Rejoice always, pray continually, give thanks in all circumstances; for this is God’s will for you in Christ Jesus”. Give thanks in
all circumstances.
Not just when it’s tidy. Not just when it’s perfect. In the chaos, disappointment, and the hurt too. And trust Him. Trust Him when it’s messy. Trust Him when your situation looks nothing like you thought it would, even if it’s what you prayed for. Then look for truth in what you are beholding. While it is common to want to run from the uncomfortable and fix the broken things, it is often in those very places that we grow and mature.
I pray the next time you look at an oak tree, you are reminded as I am, to look for the beauty and faithfulness in the mess and chaos. Embrace what God is doing, thank Him for His provision and presence, and trust Him in the process. Remember that God is for you and YOU ARE SO LOVED!





