
The smell of fresh basil and tomato vines still brings me back to my grandmother’s garden, where I learned my first lessons about faith. It wasn’t a fancy place — just a modest plot behind her small house — but to her, it was holy ground. “God’s first temple was a garden,” she would say, quoting some forgotten poet as she worked the soil with hands that had spent decades nurturing both plants and grandchildren.
I was 12 when she first insisted I help her with the spring planting. At that age, I would rather have been anywhere else than kneeling in dirt, carefully spacing tiny seeds in neat rows. But Nonna wouldn’t hear my protests. “Gardens and faith need tending,” she’d say. “You can’t just show up on Sundays and expect things to grow.”
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Those early morning hours in her garden became unexpected lessons in spiritual formation. While other grandmothers might have taught the Catechism through books, mine taught it through soil and seeds. She would tell me stories of the saints while we weeded — St. Fiacre, the patron saint of gardens, was a particular favorite. “He knew what we know,” she’d say, “that working the earth brings you closer to heaven.”
The parallels between gardening and faith grew clearer with each passing season. When I complained about pulling weeds, she taught me about spiritual discipline. “Sin is like these weeds,” she explained, working a particularly stubborn dandelion from between her prized tomatoes. “If you don’t deal with it early, it takes over everything good.” I remember rolling my eyes then, but years later, during my first confession in months, her words came back to me as I cleared away the weeds in my own spiritual life.
She taught me about patience through the long wait for seeds to sprout. “Faith is like this,” she’d say, gesturing to the seemingly lifeless soil. “Just because you can’t see what God is doing doesn’t mean nothing’s happening underground.” Those words sustained me through later periods of spiritual drought when God seemed distant and prayers felt unanswered.
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The miracle of transformation was another lesson from her garden. Watching tiny seeds become towering sunflowers or seeing withered vines produce abundant tomatoes taught me about God’s power to bring life from what appears dead. During one particularly difficult summer, when our parish was going through painful changes, she pointed to her compost pile. “Even the dead things have purpose in God’s garden,” she said. “They feed next season’s growth.”
But perhaps the most important lesson came through the rhythm of the seasons. In our digital world of instant gratification, the garden operated on God’s timeline, not ours. There was a time to plant, a time to tend, and a time to harvest. You couldn’t rush it, and you couldn’t skip steps. “Like the liturgical year,” she’d explain while showing me how to prune the raspberry canes, “there are seasons for everything in faith. Sometimes it’s Easter joy, sometimes it’s Lenten sacrifice.”
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Now, years after her passing, I tend my own small garden. It’s nothing compared to hers, but each spring as I prepare the soil, I feel her presence. The rituals she taught me — blessing the seeds, praying while weeding, sharing the harvest — have become my own spiritual practices. They connect me not only to her memory but to a deeper understanding of faith itself.
When my own children help me in the garden now, I find myself sharing her wisdom. “Watch how the plants always grow toward the light,” I tell them, echoing her words. “That’s what faith is like — keeping yourself turned toward God even when the path isn’t straight.”
In today’s world, where spirituality often feels commodified and faith can seem disconnected from daily life, my grandmother’s garden offers a remedy. It reminds me that faith, like a garden, needs daily attention, patience, and trust in things unseen. It teaches that growth often happens in silence and darkness, and that the most precious fruits often come after the hardest seasons.
Most importantly, it shows that God’s lessons are written not only in Scripture but also in the soil beneath our feet, waiting for those willing to kneel down, dig in, and learn.