As We Sow, So Shall We Reap // Reaping God's Harvest in My Life, Part 3
Description
When you think about it, sowing seed and then reaping a harvest is all about multiplication. You sow one seed, you reap a hundred. But the extent, the quantum of the multiplication factor, has an awful lot to do with the way that we sow the seed in the first place.
Lord of the Harvest
Over the last few weeks we have been working our way through a series called, “Reaping God’s Harvest in My Life”. A couple of weeks ago we looked at how Isaac sowed seed in the middle of a drought and reaped a harvest. And again last week we looked at figuring out exactly what the drought is about because sometimes we go through seasons of drought; seasons where we’re not experiencing God’s blessing the way we should be and we think, “God what’s going on? Why am I going through this? And sometimes Dad is trying to get our attention.
Sometimes God knows there’s something wrong in our lives; we’ve rebelled in this area, maybe with our finances or maybe we’re living in un-forgiveness or maybe we are living in some sort of rebellion. Maybe we are not spending the time with God that we need to be and God thinks, “I love my child so much, it’s time to get his attention; it’s time to get her attention,” and so we start going through this drought thing and … “God, what’s going on?" And we need to figure out what that drought is about.
Those seasons of drought are very important times because there’s power in sowing seeds of faith during the drought. The power comes from the faith that we place in God and His desire to bless us. So if you’ve missed those couple of programs, you can actually purchase this series on CD, because it’s one of those teaching series that I believe all need to experience so that we know what it is to live with the Lord of the harvest; so we know what it is to reap God’s harvest in my life.
This week we are going to take a closer look at two things. The first one is – what exactly is God’s harvest? I mean, how do we know when we are in harvest time? What does God’s harvest look like? Good question! And the second one is the importance of not only sowing seeds of faith but looking at how we sow those seeds. I’m really excited about being together today because when we speak about God’s harvest, we’re talking about His grace and His power and I hope you’re excited too, so stick with me over the next twenty minutes or so.
Jesus called God "The Lord of the Harvest" and the notion of sowing and reaping, is one of those consistent principles that we find right through the Scriptures; Old Testament and New Testament – it’s a pretty straightforward proposition.
You buy some seed, you put it in the ground, you wait for the rain and the sun and it grows into a plant that gives you more seeds. You don’t sow, you don’t reap the harvest! The question is: is it worth sowing in the first place? I mean, why should we bother? Going out and buying seed – it costs money. Sowing seed in the ground is hard work. You know, it’s not always convenient to sow seeds. When God says to us: “Go and forgive that person,” it’s not always convenient. We don’t always want to do it. Invariably, when God says: “Sow seed", it involves some form of sacrifice. It involves something that we really don’t want to do.
And so it’s not unreasonable to say, “Well, do I really want to sow seed? Maybe this drought thing isn’t so bad. Maybe I can just survive it on my own. Cor … sowing seed, taking a risk, spending money, spending emotional energy and then God has this crazy idea, instead of feeding my need, He wants me to plant His seed somewhere else. Oh, I don’t know.” So when we are making a decision as to whether we should plant this seed; whether we should experience seed time and harvest, we have to weigh these things up. On the one hand we look at the cost of the seed, the effort of sowing, the risk of loss and on the other hand, we look at the value of the harvest. We balance those two things and we think: is it worth it?
So what does God’s harvest look like? Is God’s harvest about money and a big house and a nice car? We all have physical needs – there’s not doubt – and you may be listening; you may be someone who has really acute, physical needs. This program goes all over the world. This program is listened to by wealthy people and people who don’t have enough food to eat. God is in those physical things. God wants to meet our needs but we all know that when the physical provision – the food, the shelter, the security, the money – when it gets to a certain level, to meet our need, after that all the other luxuries, all the other things are lovely and nice and they’re wonderful icing on the cake, but they’re not the things that ultimately satisfy us. They’re not the things that fill us up.
So what does God’s harvest look like? Well, Paul, the Apostle, in Romans chapter 14, verse 17, he wrote this; he said, “The Kingdom of God is not about food or drink but righteousness and peace and joy in the Holy Spirit.” Now remember, Jesus taught that we should ask God for our daily bread. God is into our physical needs, but what Paul is saying here is: Beyond all of that, come on, let’s get it straight – the Kingdom of God, the reign of God in our lives, is not ultimately about physical things. It’s not ultimately about food or drink, even though God’s heart is to provide for us and God does provide for us. The main game,” says Paul “is righteousness and peace and joy in the Holy Spirit.”
Righteousness is that sense of completion and goodness that we have when we know, we know, we know that what Jesus did for us on the cross has made us whole, has given us forgiveness, has given us a clean slate and when we live out that goodness and that righteousness as God’s Word calls us, we experience a peace and a joy in the Holy Spirit that words can’t, can’t describe. I mean, peace – who doesn‘t want that? Who doesn’t want the deep, powerful, wonderful peace; the peace of knowing no matter what happens in life, I’m going to be ok? Who doesn’t want that? Who doesn’t want joy; the free gift that God puts in our hearts, through the Holy Spirit? Now that’s a harvest! Righteousness and peace and joy in the Holy Spirit.
If we were all reaping that sort of harvest in every part of our lives, the rest wouldn’t matter, would it? Let me ask you: righteousness, peace and joy in the Holy Spirit – is your harvest abundant in those areas? Are you full, overflowing type of harvest or do you want to come up higher in the harvest? Do you want more righteousness; do you want more peace; do you want more joy; do you want to experience God’s goodness more and more? I know that I want that!
In a sense, I can’t have more righteousness than I already have because it’s all done for me on the cross. I’m free – I’ve got eternal life but, we want to live that out too, don’t we? We want to see our lives change to be like that; to experience the peace. So, food and drink; the physical stuff is fine but that’s not really the main game. Its righteousness and peace and joy in the Holy Spirit – that’s life. How do we get that? How do we experience that?
Give and It Will be Given
Well, we are talking today about reaping God’s harvest and we saw before, that the main game in the Kingdom of God is not food and drink; it’s not physical things, even though God wants to provide for us, its righteousness, peace and joy in the Holy Spirit. Oh, fabulous; now that is a harvest worth having! The question is, exactly how do we sow in order to reap that sort of a harvest – of righteousness and peace and joy in the Holy Spirit? It’s a good question and it’s a question that Jesus answered directly.
If you have a Bible, open it at Luke chapter 6, verses 37 and 38. Let’s have a read. This is what Jesus said. He said:
Do not judge and you will not be judged. Do not condemn and you will not be condemned. Forgive and you will be forgiven. Give and it will be given to you, a good measure, pressed down, shaken together, running over, will be put into your lap, for the measure with which you give, will be the measure with which you get back.
Now, often you hear the second verse; the bit about "the good measure, pressed down, shaken together, running over, will be put into your lap", you hear that in terms of God’s financial blessing. I’ve often heard it used that way. Now, do I believe God blesses a giver? Absolutely, yes I do! And we’ll look at that later in this program. But that’s not what Jesus is talking about here.
He’s talking about three things – He says, “Do not judge and you will not be judged, don’t condemn and you won’t be condemned, forgive and you will be forgiven. Give like this and it will be given to you, a good measure, pressed down, shaken together, running over will be put into your lap. With whatever measure you give that’s the measure with which you will receive." Judgment, condemnation and forgiveness - if we give these in the right way then we’ll get back in the same way. Isn’t it interesting?
He’s talking about some really interesting concepts here – judgement, well that’s criticism and bitterness. That’s when I judge you and I demand recompense because you have wronged me. I judge you because you’ve got some weakness and I think, “You just have to fix this, you owe me buddy.” You know, I need my pound of flesh from you – that’s judgement and when I judge you it hurts and when you judge me, it hurts.
Question: do you like being around judgmental people? Are they your first choice to be close friends? Well, obviously not, but we all love to judge and what we do is we focus on people’s failings and ignore all their good points. That’s what judgement is and Jesus said: “Do not judge and you will not be judg



