As I write this, we’re in the middle of State Fair season here in Minnesota. I’ve written about my nonsensical adoration of the fair before. Here’s a refresher:
“Nothing makes sense about my deep love of our Minnesota State Fair. I hate crowds (and between 150,000-250,000 people attend each day. Over 1.9 million people total last year!). I hate hot weather (and it takes place over the twelve days before Labor Day – usually our hottest days of the year). I do not prefer operating on whims and without a plan (and we twist and turn our way through hundreds of acres of fairgrounds, being led fully by whims). My stomach hurts if I look at a new food (and we sample ev.ery.thing at the fair, from mini-donuts to milkshakes, corndogs to walleye bites).
Yet despite going against the grain of my natural disposition, our annual State Fair day brings Christmas-morning-level excitement and joy to my heart. Each year, it’s just us and a couple hundred thousand others gathered at the Great Minnesota Get-Together, testing out tractors and each other’s patience as we spend 13 hours walking over 18,000 steps and 7+ miles. . . together.”
This year, we spent the day at the fair with my in-laws — first-timers who were completely overwhelmed by the whole experience. There’s just no way to prepare for such a deluge of people, food, activities, animals (in barns), exhibits, booths, sights, sounds, smells, steps, and fun. We don’t call it the Great Minnesota Get-Together for nothing!
Walking through the streets of the fair, I blinked back tears as I realized the crowds around me reflected the beauty and diversity of the Kingdom. People of all shapes, colors, beliefs, relationships, politics, and more, all walking around and waiting in line and sitting at the parade. Languages and voices and laughter all mingled together in one big extravagant display of gathering.
It takes all kinds to make the fair what it is — a celebration and cornucopia of difference, of unique talents and giftings, of the patchwork that makes up our great state.
The exhibit halls at the fair are full of this beauty on display. Thousands of people submit their creative activities for judging, including educational projects for students in age-segmented, very specific categories. (For instance, my daughter won a second-place red ribbon for her submission this year in the “grade 1-3 weaving and textiles” category.) And there are entire buildings dedicated to different animals, plus creative, educational, and agri-and-horticultural pursuits. Every year, there are dozens of categories and hundreds of displayed pieces — everything from quilts and woodworking to handstitched clothing and felted purses.
You’ll also find cakes and pies, loaves of bread and cookies of all varieties, canned goods and maple syrup of all grades. Sheep and pigs, cows and showhorses, chickens and goats. Zucchini and pumpkins, potatoes and apples. Not to mention crop art — painstakingly crafted portraits and pictures created entirely out of seeds and stems — plus Christmas trees and honey!
All lovingly crafted and curated and created, tended to with care, and perfected. Submitted for competition with confidence, hope, and pride.
All talents. All gifts. All entirely unique and specific. All seen and celebrated… when they could’ve been overlooked.
Because how often do we celebrate woodcarving? Sheep-rearing? 3rd-grade yarn weaving? How often does an elderly quilter receive an award for their handiwork? How often do we look at a cookie or a loaf of bread with wonder and awe, praising the baker and placing a ribbon on their apron?
How often do we look deeply into someone’s interests and quirky giftings long enough to support them in pursuing that passion?
How often do we ignore or criticize what could be seen and celebrated, especially when it doesn’t suit us, when it isn’t convenient, when it doesn’t fit into the box we believe is best? I think of personality gifts such as energy, earnestness, drive, and sharp wit. I know as a mom of four, my kids have traits that are definitely inconvenient to me (it’s exhausting to raise spirited children) and gifts that I maybe wouldn’t have chosen (loving and caring for bugs and frogs is one that comes to mind). Even so, they are the passions and gifts that my kids have been given, and I adore the whole of who they are.
And so does the One who dreamed them up.
1 Corinthians 12:12-27 reminds us:
“Just as a body, though one, has many parts, but all its many parts form one body, so it is with Christ. For we were all baptized by one Spirit so as to form one body—whether Jews or Gentiles, slave or free—and we were all given the one Spirit to drink. Even so the body is not made up of one part but of many.
. . .God has put the body together, giving greater honor to the parts that lacked it, so that there should be no division in the body, but that its parts should have equal concern for each other. If one part suffers, every part suffers with it; if one part is honored, every part rejoices with it.
Now you are the body of Christ, and each one of you is a part of it.” (NIV)
It takes all talents, all giftings, all weird and wonderful personalities, all coming together in one place to make my State Fair the extravaganza that I love so much. . . and so it is with the whole of humanity God loves so much. It takes us all — and all of who we are — to make up the One Body God has in mind that Paul is speaking to in his letter to the Corinthians. The kingdom of God needs all of us, and all of us bringing our whole selves into it to make it great, and different, and beautiful.
This is the way of the Kingdom. This is the way we move as One, even as we are wildly different.
How can you bring the fullness of your gifts into where you are today?
Fellow Minnesotan here and I love our state fair! Thank you for this devotion. I’m going to work on honoring and thanking God for the little gifts in my life.
Dear Anna……….I was enthralled by your description of your State Fair. I love to see all these things, but I get overwhelmed in big crowds like that and don’t know which way to go. Also, the heat is not my friend. I am so fair skinned that I can get a severe sunburn in just 10 minutes no matter what kind of sunscreen I use. It does sound fabulous to me especially with all that great food that you mentioned. What an experience! So as God created us in our mother’s womb, He did what he wanted for us to be. I loved the scripture you included from 1 Corinthians. It was very comforting and explains so much about how we are all different, but one with Christ. My mother used to tell me that she could not understand why my sister and I were complete opposites in all ways. Personality, wants or thoughts that we had and I love to help people and my sister does not. One funny example of this is when I was a toddler so many years ago, I always shared my toys and my sister was very possessive of hers. Unfortunately, she did not believe, but I really did and do. Thank you Anna for your wonderful very eye-opening words today. I will certainly read this one over and over. I do believe that all of you women from (in)courage were sent to us by Jesus to help those of us that live in a dark season as I do and it seems when 1 gets cleared, another one drops on me. I pray so much during the day and night and this calms me, but certainly your words apply to those that have mostly happy lives. I am struggling, but I work hard to be able to let God help me, and He has as well as Jesus and my wonderful Holy Spirit. I send my love to you Anna for all of your words and I got so excited when I checked my email first thing and found that you had written our daily devotion. I thank you for all the help you have given me over the years since I found (in)courage……..Betsy
Love this! Makes me want to experience our local peach festival again. I’ve stayed away for many years for the same reasons you gave. But I used to love it.
You did make me think of Heaven. I think I’ll enjoy the crowds there.
As a fellow fair fancier I totally understand the joy of being part of the diversity that is His Family. The celebration of His gifts is something we don’t do often enough. Any local festival, county fair and state fair gives us the opportunity to wallow (my granddaughter shows pig) in this wonderful things that are God’s handiwork.