Tag Archives: four months

SUPERNATURAL HARVEST

SUPERNATURAL HARVEST

Do you not say, “Four months more and then the harvest”? I tell you, open your eyes and look at the fields! They are ripe for harvest. John 4:35.

Imagine the disciples’ surprise, when they arrived back from the village of Sychar where they had gone to buy lunch, to find Jesus deep in conversation with a Samaritan woman. They were reticent to question Him. Instead, they urged Him to eat, but His mind was still mulling over the encounter He had just had with the woman and the stunning outcome it had produced. His response was almost as though He were talking to Himself. “Doing God’s will is more satisfying than just eating lunch,” He murmured.

In the meantime, the women abandoned her water jar in her haste to tell the villagers of her life-changing encounter with a Jewish rabbi who said He was the Messiah. Gone was her guilt, her shame, and her embarrassment in the presence of the other villagers. She sought them out, instead, to announce her discovery and to invite them to share her joy.

To His disciples Jesus proceeded to explain a spiritual principle that needs to be taken out of the context of a missionary appeal that we often put it into, and placed where it belongs – in the ordinary, everyday encounters that we have with people who, like the Samaritan woman, are thirsty for “living water” but are drinking at the wrong fountain. By offering her water that would forever quench her thirst, Jesus sowed a seed which, unlike natural seed, which takes time to mature into a harvest, had the power to produce new life within minutes.

In that one short encounter, a lonely, guilt-ridden woman was transformed into a new creation, forgiven, cleansed, and filled with joy, her thirst quenched and satisfied by a new love that would enable her to become a woman of dignity and beauty and a worshipper of the true God because she was fully accepted and loved by God.

Ephraim, the Syrian, in the 4th century, said, “Jesus came to the fountain as a hunter. He threw in the grain before one pigeon that He might catch the whole flock. At the beginning of the conversation, He did not make Himself known to her, but first she caught sight of a thirsty man, then a Jew, then a rabbi, then afterwards a prophet, last of all, the Messiah. She tried to get the better of the thirsty man, she showed her dislike for the Jew, she heckled the rabbi, she was swept off her feet by the prophet, she adored the Christ.”

How this should encourage us, who want to follow and imitate Jesus, to believe that the word of God, sown into the soil of the human heart, has the power to awaken desire and to produce a harvest of new life, not in “four months” but the moment that soul believes that Jesus is the Christ, Son of the living God.

WHAT’S THE KEY?

WHAT’S THE KEY?

“‘My food,’ said Jesus, ‘is to do the will of Him who sent me and to finish His work.

“‘Don’t you have a saying, ‘It’s still four months until harvest?’ I tell you, open your eyes and look at the fields! They are ripe for harvest.’

“‘Even now the one who reaps draws a wage and harvests a crop for eternal life, so that the sower and the reaper may be glad together. Thus the saying, ‘One sows and another reaps’ is true. I sent you to reap what you have not worked for. Others have done the hard work and you have reaped the benefits of their labour.'” John 4:34-38 (NIV).

Jesus had just had an astonishing encounter with a Samaritan woman who had been married and divorced five times and was now shacked up with a sixth man to whom she was not even married. That says something about the woman, doesn’t it? There could not have been a worse candidate for a response to Him! At least that’s how we would have judged her.

But Jesus never viewed any person as too far gone. Underneath her hard exterior was what He saw – potential. One just had to know where to find the weak spot to gain access to the heart. This woman’s weak spot was her longing to be loved. She tried five times and five times it didn’t work because she was being used, not loved.

Perhaps marriage wasn’t even an option any more. Just shack up and, if it didn’t work, move on and keep searching. But the problem was that the only ones who wanted a soiled garment were those who were soiled as well. By this time she was so hardened that she expected to be used and abused because she was worth nothing more than that in her own eyes.

To be treated with respect by a Jewish man brought her up short and got her attention, and we know the outcome. Jesus broke down her wall and touched her heart. When the disciples returned and saw Him in conversation with her, unheard of for Jewish man, they could not fathom what was going on. They saw her joy when she abandoned her water jar and rushed back to town and their eyebrows went up!

Jesus had to straighten out their thinking once again. Using imagery with which they were familiar, He challenged them. ‘You guys are thinking, ‘It’s too soon to start harvesting these Samaritans for the kingdom of God. They aren’t ready for it yet. Sometime in the future we’ll preach to them.’ This woman’s response is proof that it’s time for the harvest right now.’

‘I have harvested this woman in a very short time, but there’s a huge harvest out there waiting to be reaped and I can’t do it alone. We have to work together. It’s not important who does the planting and who does the reaping. It’s team work and both sower and reaper get the wages for doing the job.’

What was Jesus getting at? Was He saying that it was not important who did the work but rather that it was important to get the work done. Those who worked together to sow and reap were guaranteed their share of the profits. There were many who had already done the sowing. How else did this half-breed woman know that Messiah was coming? She may not have had it all straight but she was not entirely ignorant of God’s Word.

In the natural world, there is a time lapse between sowing and reaping but, in the lives of human beings the time for harvesting is always now. Like Jesus and the woman, it’s a case of finding the soft spot. Why did she have this emptiness in her soul which she tried to fill with human love only to be disappointed again and again?

Although she did not know it, she had a craving for a father’s love. We know nothing about her father, and she knew nothing about the perfect Father. He was the key to unlock her heart. Jesus was the mirror of the Father to her. When He introduced her to the Father, everything fell into place!

Only the Father’s love that can fill your empty heart.

Acknowledgement

Scripture taken from THE HOLY BIBLE, NEW INTERNATIONAL VERSION®, NIV® Copyright © 1973, 1978, 1984, 2011 by Biblica, Inc.® Used by permission. All rights reserved worldwide.