When Fire Scatters Seeds
What if the most devastating moments in our lives are actually God's way of planting us exactly where we need to be? This message takes us deep into Acts 8, where we discover that persecution meant to destroy the early church became the very mechanism God used to spread the gospel beyond Jerusalem's walls. Through the powerful imagery of South Africa's King Protea flower, which requires fire to release its seeds, we see a stunning parallel: sometimes we need the heat of crisis to break open what God has locked within us. The scattered believers weren't running in defeat; they were being intentionally sown across new territories. Philip, a simple deacon who served tables, found himself in Samaria, a place Jews actively avoided for 700 years, yet this became the site of miraculous breakthrough and great joy. We're challenged to examine our own scattering seasons, those painful transitions we've interpreted as punishment or failure, and recognize them instead as divine planting. The grassroots church, the everyday believers, became the primary missionaries who shook the world. This isn't about waiting for official programs or perfect timing; it's about the overflow of an encounter with Jesus that we simply cannot contain. Wherever the Spirit plants us, whether in boardrooms or dark alleys, Christ has already been there before us, preparing the soil for harvest.
