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GOOD SOIL by Jeff Chu

GOOD SOIL

The Education of an Accidental Farmhand

by Jeff Chu

Pub Date: March 25th, 2025
ISBN: 9780593727362
Publisher: Convergent

A gentle and poignant memoir of spiritual calling found on a community farm.

Striking out from the “hustle and din” of New York, Chu finds context, connection, and growth in the burgeoning farm program at Princeton Theological Seminary. Made up of insightful and gently meandering vignettes, this memoir from the author of Does Jesus Really Love Me? (2013) explores the process of growing into a greater calling through slowing down and reflecting on the environments around us and those from which we have come. Chu sees in the freshly turned soil the basis for crop growth, which is itself teeming with a vibrant ecosystem, from microbes to insects, all of which collaborate to create its nutritive properties. Delving into the soils that we come from—our families, cultures, communities—we can only humbly let go of the idea that we alone shape our path; rather, our roots and those around us “are inescapably interdependent with the world.” At the seminary’s farm program, called the Farminary, Chu finds a community bent not on reaping the fruit of the land but on examining the growing conditions of life on the farm, from crops and livestock to the emotional and spiritual lives of fellow seminarians. The author blends subtle and rich descriptions of his colleagues with descriptions of the casual interactions with nature—egrets in a pond, earthworms tilling through the compost pile, how our cultural associations shape our connection to different produce—to form a wandering path through the farm’s seasons. The author paints an emotional and personal reflection on his own path to the seminary—one that was once drawn taut between the religious principles of his parents and his personal growth and marriage to his husband. The question that recurs and will land for readers is how we support a holistic environment to sustain our spiritual lives.

Sustenance for the soul found while diving hands into the dirt.