We at Harvest Haven Market Farm have decided to adopt the dandelion
as our official symbol, and we are excited about it.
When Marilyn and I, Victor, first purchased our home at Moon River Estates
in April of 1988, we decided not to use chemical pest control in our
yard unless there was no other choice. We then marshaled any available
help in order to remove the weeds by hand from our half-acre of lawn.
Instead of entertaining or talking with friends or neighbors, or with
each other, while sitting around, we would visit on the lawn.
The main “weed” was the dandelion. Countless hours were
spent with body-aggravating labor, getting down on hands and knees with
a screwdriver, hour after hour, day after day. The weeding tested all
associates exposed to it, even those who were paid to do it, weeding
them out, some in minutes, some in hours, while some faithfully answered
continuously, as needed, to the strange “call of duty.”
The physical labor was not the only challenge. There was also the psychological
warfare. “Are we crazy? Aren’t there better things to do
with our time and energies? How boring! How tedious!” Add to these
the social stigma and embarrassment. There were the taunts, hoots and
howls from the neighbors, who thought we were crazy. “Why don’t
you cut your grass with scissors? Ha, ha!” While their children
were saying it, we knew some of their parents were thinking it.
One day, I was overwhelmed with the apparently unconquerable job, having
nobody to help keep up with the “weed” that never quits.
I prayed and heard, “These things are defeated from above.” I
thanked the Lord, believing He would provide a way.
My brother, Archie, came by that afternoon and helped for about an hour
and left to do other duties. I continued on my own and in a few hours
the job was done, a job that initially was certain to take several days.
I could not explain it, except that “these things were defeated
from above,” by inexplicable means.
I was very thankful to the Lord for this miracle. I have heard many
things from Him and He has manifested Himself, giving me direction on
many occasions. I considered that if I was being very silly in this matter,
He would have told me. Instead, He taught me to look to Him for the solution
to any problem that would arise. Never once did He rebuke me for, or
advise me against, controlling our lawn against weeds the hard but clean
way.
It is remarkable how much one can learn from seemingly simple and apparently
meaningless occupations. Through these circumstances we learned laws
and principles of life. I will not get into those now, but they are neither
few nor insignificant.
We also learned somewhat of human nature. Would the proud person weed
a lawn in public? It was interesting to see the reactions and see the
Lord separate people into two groups.
Furthermore, I was finding myself free to pray and to meditate. While
on the lawn, “on my knees,” the Lord would speak to me about
many matters and give me doctrines and revelations for others and myself.
At times, I would have to run into the house and share what I was hearing
with Marilyn, or someone else, or write it down.
I was also becoming more and more aware of the significant health and
nutritional benefits of the much-maligned dandelion. We knew that many
were consuming the leaves as a salad vegetable (the Italians are known
for this diet habit) and grinding the root to make a substitute coffee
beverage. I began to nibble on the leaves as I weeded and tried to encourage
others to do so but nobody was interested. “I’ll help you
pick them if I must, but I will not eat them!” was the reaction.
George Cairns, an elderly fellow from Illinois, suffering cancer, was
given a revelation that by drying dandelion roots hard and grinding them
to a powder in a certain way, leaving some soil residues clinging to
the roots, these would serve as a powerful liver cleanser and anticarcinogen.
He took half a teaspoon each day and was free of cancer in six months.
Years later, he is healthy in his eighties and helping many others. We
decided to make this powder ourselves, convinced that it is highly beneficial.
A Symbol is Born
In seeking an appropriate symbol for Harvest Haven, we pondered in vain.
One day, Mariko, Mark Benson’s wife, in thinking outside the box,
conceived using the dandelion in our brochure. What would people think?
I began to realize the implications, particularly in relation to our
lives, physically and spiritually.
I saw how the dandelion is much like the Lord Jesus Christ. Here are
the similarities:
The dandelion is everywhere. Jesus Christ is omnipresent.
The dandelion will grow anywhere, except where eradicated. One may find
the Lord anywhere, except where people have excluded Him.
The dandelion is hated and warred against by almost all people. Isn’t
that the way it is with the Lord? “He came unto His own and His
own did not receive Him.” He said He was hated by the world because
He testified against it.
The dandelion is not a pest, but is good medicine. Jesus Christ, hated
by all, is Good Medicine. He is the Good Physician, Who heals, though
despised.
The dandelion is bitter to eat but brings health, if consumed. Jesus
Christ, the Truth, is bitter to receive, but if received, brings healing
and makes the consumer free.
The entire dandelion is health-promoting…the leaves, flowers,
stems and root. Jesus Christ is the Savior of all mankind. He is goodness
and love, sent to mankind for man’s wellbeing and salvation.
The dandelion flower is a golden color. Gold represents God and precious
value. The rest of the plant is green, representing life, nutrition and
rest. Is that not what the Lord is all about? He came to give us life,
to feed us Himself and to give us rest from our labors.
The juice of the dandelion is white. In Scripture, white represents
the righteousness of God, which can only come by Jesus Christ.
Remarkably, the juice blackens the skin, though harmless, and likely
healthful. To the world, the life of God soils a person. That is why
Isaiah the prophet, who saw the coming of the Lord, the manifestation
of the Life of God, wrote this:
“He was despised and rejected by people. He was a man of sorrows,
familiar with suffering. He was despised like one from whom people turn
their faces, and we didn't consider him to be worth anything” (Isaiah
53:3 GW).
Dandelions bring no harm and are good not only to and for us. The rabbits
and the deer come to our yard and eat them as well. The birds eat the
seeds. The bees love them. The environment loves them, with calcium (an
essential ingredient) and elemental balance restored to the earth where
dandelions grow. The Lord is good for all. True religion is good for
all. Healing and nourishment happen in the Lord.
The dandelion comes as a common weed, unrecognized and unwanted, though
far more potent than other plants as a medicinal and healing herb. Jesus
Christ took upon Himself the form of a man, humbling Himself to the death
of the cross, despised and rejected of men, the Stone rejected, the Bible
says, yet full of true value.
Dandelion seeds fly with the wind, like the Word of God that comes from
Heaven and goes wherever He wills.
Dandelion seeds drop into the ground and come up again multiplied. Jesus
Christ was crucified, buried and raised up again to multiply Himself
manifold, in order to bring healing and life to the world. While the
dandelion “dies” over winter, it rises again because it is
a perennial, even as the Lord is eternal.
It can look messy, especially when dandelions go to seed. That is how
salvation works. The work of God in a person’s soul can look quite
ugly (take Job for example), but afterwards, we have spiritual health,
His work yielding the “peaceable fruit of righteousness.”
Finally, “dandelion” means “teeth of the lion.” Jesus
Christ once came as a Lamb, to die for us, but now He comes as the Lion
from the tribe of Judah. He comes with teeth. God is a consuming fire,
the Bible declares. He comes to judge the earth in righteousness. Nobody
fools with a lion, especially This One, Jesus Christ Glorified.
All praise, thanksgiving, blessing, power, might, strength, riches,
wisdom, glory, honor, majesty, authority, dominion, salvation and worship
to Him forevermore. Amen!
We at Harvest Haven Identify
How do we at Harvest Haven identify with the dandelion? The dandelion,
while able to provide abundant health, is despised by many as a nuisance.
We have been perceived as strange and troublesome by conventional medicine,
by conventional agriculture and by conventional religion, even as a cult.
Yet, our calling is to do good before God, for Him and for His creation,
to bring genuine health at all levels to those that need and search for
it.
While others spray us with 2-4Damnation, just as they do the dandelion,
we will continue to return, to rise up and shine, ever hoping that people
will eat, instead of kill, us. Yet, children love us as they also love
the dandelion’s flowers!
Our dandelion symbol has one stem, two flowers, twelve leaves and sixty-six
rootlets on one taproot. Each of these numbers has significance and is
of personal interest to us. It remains for others to determine their
significance, if they care to do so.
Harvest Haven’s slogan is “Providing the Essentials of Life.” For
those who believe, Lord willing, we are able to provide the physical,
mental and spiritual essentials…salvation for body, mind and spirit.
God has provided them for us and now it is our mission and purpose to
share what He has given us with others. That is what Harvest Haven is
all about.
Yes, in Jesus Christ, we are that dandelion, and thankful for it!