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Rev. Langerak is pastor of Southeast Protestant
Reformed Church in Grand Rapids, Michigan.
At this same time each year, it seems
that the world is morbidly preoccupied with death. A favorite name for
the season is fall, something leaves do after they shrivel up and die. A
celebrated holiday, Halloween, is merely a weak attempt to mock death
and hell—and by implication Jesus who has the keys of both. Even
Thanksgiving Day seems to be, for many, little more than a day to “eat
and drink, for tomorrow we die.” Let it not be so for the believer.
The season we know as fall, Scripture calls harvest. It does so in God’s
promise to Noah, “While the earth remaineth, seedtime and harvest …
summer and winter … shall not cease” (Gen.
8:22). Harvest is a time
of celebration for the church. The greatest joy is harvest time (Is.
9:3). During harvest,
Israel had its great holiday Feasts of Passover, Unleavened Bread, and
Weeks (Pentecost). Then they enjoyed a Sabbath’s rest and fruit of their
labor (Ex.
34:12;
Ex. 23:16). The laws
governing harvest ensured everyone could partake of the bounties. The
Israelite landowner could not harvest the corners of his field, remove
every scrap of food, or return to fetch any sheaf he had forgotten; this
harvest food was for the poor, orphans, widows, and Gentiles (Lev.
23:22;
Deut. 24:19). Jesus even
benefited from this harvest generosity, for His great ancestor Ruth the
Moabitess, survived by gleaning the crops Boaz obediently had left (Ruth
1:22).
By His providence God made sure joyful events of covenant salvation
occurred at harvest. It was during harvest that Israel both escaped the
bondage of Egypt and also crossed the Jordan into the land flowing with
milk and honey (Josh.
3:15). At harvest time
Samson was provoked to war against the Philistines, and reduced their
crops to a smoking wasteland (Jud.
15:1). Gideon’s timely
victory at harvest kept Israel from starving (Jud.
6:11). The ark was
returned to Israel at harvest (I
Sam. 6:13). When God
brought His people from captivity, it was called a harvest (Ps.
126:5-6). And even the
great temple would be built on an old harvest threshing-floor (II
Chr. 3:1).
Harvest joy is God’s gracious blessing. Since He is pleased to give it
in the way of wise toil, Scripture gives much admonishment regarding
harvest. The ants are examples of diligent labor to harvest while there
is time (Prov.
6:8). A wise son gathers
during harvest, but the fool sleeps (Prov.
10:5). If the sluggard
will not sow if it is cold, he begs during the harvest (Prov.
20:4). They that sow
iniquity and wickedness, harvest the same (Job.
4:8). And so when His
people do not live thankfully in obedience, God takes away harvest joy
and replaces it with desperate sorrow (Is.
17:11). When they eat like
piggish sots, He sends the beast, fire, insect, and worm to destroy the
harvest, saying, “Be ye ashamed … because the harvest of the field is
perished” (Joel
1:11). When they oppress
the poor, He withholds rain so the harvest is withered (Amos
4:7). If they trust in
their own strength, He sends enemies to take their food so they cry,
“The harvest is past … and we are not saved” (Jer.
8:19). But with repentance
and thanksgiving, He sends harvest blessings again. For they that sow in
tears, harvest in joy (Ps.
126:5).
Perhaps the world’s preoccupation with this time of year is because they
sense that harvest marks their own death, it is the season of their fall
from glory. To the wicked, God cries, “The harvest is ripe … for their
wickedness is great” (Joel
3:13). Concerning Babylon,
He shouts, “It is time to thresh her, yet a little while and the time of
her harvest shall come” (Jer.
51:33). Even the hypocrite
shall not escape this apocalyptic harvest, for Jesus will tell the
reapers, “Gather ye first the tares, and bind them in bundles to burn” (Matt.
13:30, 39). But make no
mistake, harvest is a thankful time of celebration for the church. Its
beginning was Pentecost, the original Thanksgiving Day. Then the Spirit
of harvest was poured out and the Lord sent corn, wine, and oil to be
satisfied therewith (Joel
2:19-28). This great
harvest of God’s first fruits is on-going in fields white for harvest (John
4:35). Pray “the Lord of
the harvest, that he would send forth laborers in his harvest” (Luke
10:2), a harvest completed
in the great day of our Lord with the cry of the angel, “Thrust in thy
sickle and reap: for the time is come … for the harvest of the earth is
ripe” (Rev.
14:15).
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