The Harvest is Plentiful

When my children were young, a friend invited us to share the experience of going strawberry picking in the Georgia countryside with her and her children. The place was vast, and there was plenty to pick. The strawberries looked gorgeous, delicious, and ready to be transformed into a mouthwatering smoothie, succulent jam, or simply placed on fluffy pancakes. My children were ecstatic by the experience; they seemed unable to keep up with picking so many strawberries and placing them in their baskets. What a great joy to see them enjoy that day so much!

When I think of the term “harvest,” the vision of a large field with colorful fruits of all kinds, ripe and crying out to be picked, comes to mind. Their purpose for being planted in the ground has been fulfilled, and it is then time for them to be picked, uprooted, and delivered to a new home with the purpose of delighting the hungriest, or perhaps demanding, palates.

This leads me to reflect on what Jesus says in Luke 10:2: “The harvest is great, but the workers are few. Therefore, ask the owner of the crop to send workers to collect it.”

If my friend had not invited me to pick strawberries, my children and I would not have enjoyed such an experience. The same is true for us as believers. Our job is not only to invite someone to pick but also to come along with them and do the job. The harvest is ready and plentiful, for there are many who need to hear the good news about salvation. Now it is our turn to become that answered prayer, to be a part of a battalion of necessary workers who come to bring the chosen into the Kingdom of heaven.

The harvest is great, and the field is also great for harvesting. There is little time left for Jesus to return—we must take ownership of Jesus’ commission to the 70 in Luke 10.

Charles Spurgeon highlighted the need and urgency of sending workers to carry out this great work by saying: “Now the Greek (word for “send workers”) is much more violent. It is that he would push them forward and throw them; it is the same word that is used for the expulsion of a demon from a possessed man. It takes great power to drive out a demon, it takes the same power of God to get a minister to work.”

Will you become one of those workers at your workplace, at your school, or even in your own home? It is encouraging that the harvest is great but sobering that the workers are few. The solution? Ask prayerfully to the Lord of the Harvest to send those available to proclaim the message of salvation.

Great work requires great prayers and supplications to the One who can do everything. Will you trust that your prayer and obedience will fulfill God’s great purpose?

Celebrate the Harvest!

I live in rural Iowa, surrounded by corn and soybean fields. During these past few weeks I’ve watched the once-green fields turn golden brown. I awoke one morning last month with a phrase on my heart and mind—“look at the fields.” Sensing it was a prompting from the Lord, I rose early and found those words of Jesus in John, chapter 4.

I was intrigued by a new facet I saw in that story. I always associate John 4 with Jesus speaking of living water and extending an invitation to us to never thirst again. But that day I saw how this passage also addresses the issues of hunger and harvest.

Tired from His journey, Jesus is sitting by Jacob’s well as His disciples enter the town to buy food. When they return, they urge Him to eat something. Jesus says He has food to eat that they know nothing about. The disciples wonder, Did someone else bring Jesus some food? But no.

Jesus finds his sustenance and strength from another source. He can see an abundant harvest on the horizon and is no longer physically tired or hungry. “My food,” He says, “is to do the will of him who sent me and to finish the work . . . I tell you, open your eyes and look at the fields! They are ripe for harvest” (John 4:34–35).

His source of sustenance is in the most unlikely place: Samaria—among a people whom the Jews despised. The fields He is referring to are the Samaritan townspeople who come to see Jesus after hearing the woman’s remarkable testimony. Jesus stayed in this “field” for two days and reaped an abundant harvest of souls.

A Heritage Honored

This salvation harvest in Samaria occurred near the plot of ground Jacob had given to his son Joseph (see John 4:5). This young man wisely managed a harvest in Egypt, which provided life-giving sustenance for his own people during a time of famine (see Genesis 41–47). Joseph’s bones were buried in this land (see Joshua 24:32).

After a season of spiritual famine, a season of being overlooked, disregarded, and disqualified, the Samaritans were receiving from Jesus the soul-satisfying good news of their spiritual harvest: “Now we have heard for ourselves, and we know that this man really is the Savior of the world” (John 4:42).

Opportunity for Action

Harvest is a time to gather—a time to give and receive. This is the time of year, after the harvest season, when we gather with friends and family and celebrate abundance. Tables are full; houses are full—and stomachs are full.

As you read the stories in this publication, “look at the fields” and pray for an abundant harvest. Invest in the harvest through your prayers and financial gifts. Once you read these stories, “open your eyes and look at the fields” in your community; invest in the local harvest. And, as a crop is harvested for eternal life—locally and globally—may the sower and the reaper be glad together (see John 4:36).

An abundant harvest is worthy of celebration!