WHITENED HARVEST FIELDS
Before fields are ready to harvest, they must be plowed and sowed
and tilled.
When Jesus said to His disciples, 'Lift up your eyes, and look on
the fields, for they are white already to harvest, He looked upon a
land plowed by God's faithful judgments and sowed deep with the
toils and sacrifices of prophets and teachers from Moses to John the
Baptist, and watered with the tears and blood of those who had
sealed their testimony with their lives.
When young Adoniram Judson went, as the first American missionary,
to Burmah, he found a land covered with age-long growths of
superstition and ignorance. For years he plowed and sowed in hope.
He struggled with difficulties of language and spiritual darkness.
After seven years, with as yet no converts, a friend wrote and asked
him what the prospects were. He replied, 'The prospects are as
bright as the promises of God.' Already the fields had whitened unto
harvest, and shortly after he had written to his friend he was
reaping what he had sown -- thirty thousand souls were won to Jesus
and organized for service.
It is not often that a man sows in tears and reaps in joy as Judson
did. The plowers and sowers often toil in hope, and yet must wait
for the reapers, who enter the fields and gather in the harvests
upon which they themselves have bestowed no labor.
At the present time the world seems to be one vast ripened or
ripening harvest field, waiting for earnest and skilled reapers. For
many centuries it has been plowed and harrowed by wars and
commotions, by famine and pestilence, by storm and earthquake, and
where the plowshare has not reached, the spade of disappointment and
sorrow, of bereavement and death, has left no sod unturned.
Everywhere the soil has been and is being prepared.
For many years The Army has been in the fields sowing and reaping.
Let us look back to the sowing of The Army.
Think of the tears shed for a lost world! Oh, the eyes of Officers
and Soldiers of The Army that have wept fountains of tears as they
have looked at men and women rejecting Jesus! These tears have
fallen like rain. They are a part of the sowing. God remembers them
all, He treasures them 'in His bottle.' (Psalm lvi. 8.) Has He not
said, 'They that sow in tears shall reap in joy. He that goeth forth
and weepeth, bearing precious seed, shall doubtless come again with
rejoicing, bringing his sheaves with him'? (Psalm cxxvi.5, 6.) These
tears of faithful Army workers will not be forgotten of God, and we
must not forget them, but reckon with them, for they enter into the
preparation of the harvest fields of the world.
Think of the prayers of The Army! Prayers for the Salvation of the
world; prayers for loved ones, for the children, the heathen, the
drunkard and publican, the harlot and the gambler. Think of the
prayers for enemies, prayers for the friends of God and all workers
of righteousness; prayers in the secret closet, at the family altar,
in the public hall, on the street, in the saloon, the kraal, the
bungalow, the city, the desert, the wilderness, the jungle, on
shipboard and trains, from lonely little quarters and from dying
beds! These prayers ascend to God as incense, and they shall surely
return in blessing. He does not forget them, and we must not. They
have their part in the preparation of the harvest fields.
Think of the testimonies of The Army! Testimonies to the enslaving
power of sin and the heartache and dissatisfaction surely following
its wildest pleasures; testimonies to the arresting, quickening,
convicting power of the Holy Spirit, and to the absolute certainty
He produces of a life beyond the grave and of judgment to come.
Remember all the testimonies to forgiveness of sins, to the witness
of the Spirit, and the comfort of the Holy Ghost; testimonies to the
subtle, lurking, hateful presence and power of inbred sin, and of
deliverance and cleansing from all its defilement; testimonies to
the incoming of the Holy Spirit and to love made perfect.
Recall the continual witness to answered prayers, to Divine guidance
in times of perplexity; to healing in sickness; to deliverance from
temptation, to revelations in times of darkness and loneliness; to
fresh infusions of strength and hope in seasons of weakness and
distress, to secret girdings for the long march and fierce conflicts
of life; to renewals of patience and faith in the midst of
backslidings and desolations; to meat and drink that the world knows
not of.
Do not let us forget the great host who have ever proclaimed the
spiritual realities of a Blessed Presence going before as a pillar
of cloud and fire to the end of the way; of bending skies; of
opening heavens; of songs and shoutings; of harps and palms and the
rush of angel-wings.
And last of all, testimonies in the Valley to Jesus, the Good
Shepherd, folding His dear one in the eternal embrace of His
infinite love, and to triumph for ever over death and Hell. Oh, the
power of Army testimonies! They have their part in the preparation
of the harvest fields.
Think of the songs of The Army! How they have captured and held the
attention of the world! The careless sinner and the ripened saint
alike are arrested by them. How they soften the heart, recall
memories of innocent childhood and of mother's prayers! How they
make one see the Infant Jesus in the manger, the wrestling Saviour
in the Garden, the dying Son of God on the cross, the bursting tomb,
and the Great White Throne! They interest, alarm, convict, convert,
assure, comfort, correct, inspire, guide, instruct, illumine. They
present the law in its most solemn and searching aspects; they
declare the judgments of God; they proclaim the Gospel in its
tenderest and fullest invitations, and embrace all the vital Bible
truths. And think how they are sung from the cradle to the grave!
Everywhere they are heard and known, and their sound has gone forth
to the ends of the earth. They have reached the hearts of men. We
must not forget the songs of The Army; they have their part -- an
immense part -- in the preparation of the harvest fields.
But when we consider the seed-sowing of The Army in the fields of
the world, we must add to its tears and prayers and testimonies and
songs, its literature filled with burning messages of love, yearning
appeals, faithful warnings, thrilling experiences, and patient
instructions, sown broadcast over the nations.
And to all this must be added the immeasurable influence of saintly
lives in shops and mills, and offices and stores, in mines and
kitchens, on battlefields and shipboard; the sacrifices, devotion,
faithful, patient service, and loving ministries which are
unheralded among men, and yet which silently hasten the ripening of
the harvest.
Truly, with such seed-sowing the harvest must be great, and already
it is whitened and waiting for the reapers. Oh, that the Lord of the
harvest may send forth reapers into the whitened fields!
When the harvest is ripe, it must be gathered in haste, or it will
be lost for ever.
Our harvest is at hand. The children are waiting for us to gather
them into the Saviour's fold. The great crowds of the unsaved in the
homelands and the vast pagan and heathen populations of foreign
countries need our faithful ministry speedily. How shall we reach
them? Where shall we begin? What shall we do?
1. We must determine to reach them. There must be mighty
ingatherings of the people. To this end there must be mighty
outpourings of the Spirit, and for this we must give ourselves fully
to God. 'He that reapeth receiveth wages,' said Jesus. Would you
like God for your Paymaster?
2. Then we should give ourselves to Him and do His work. If we do
this, and wait in faith upon Him, we shall see such Pentecosts and
revivals as shall pale all those that have gone before.
3. If we cannot go ourselves, we may send generous help, that others
may be sent.
Some time ago I met a plain, humble little woman at one of our Camp
Meetings, who supported a missionary in a foreign field, was
educating his boy, and at the same time was supporting a poor,
friendless old man in her home city. She did it by baking and by
selling her pies and cake and bread, and by putting the proceeds
into God's work. God will surely see that she receives wages.
A comparatively poor man in California, of whom a friend of mine
wrote, supports eight foreign missionaries. When asked how he did
it, he replied that he lived largely on oatmeal, wore celluloid
collars, and managed all his affairs on economical lines. In other
words, he denied himself to help to save the world for whom Jesus
died. God will see that he receives wages.
4. Then we can send books and letters out into the fields to reap
for us.
A gentleman of whom I heard smoked four cigars a day. He learned
that for the price of a cigar he could buy a New Testament, and then
and there he resolved to quit smoking and with the money saved to
buy and scatter Testaments, which he has since done at the rate of
more than one thousand per year. Some time ago a gentleman living
hundreds of miles away was passing through this man's native city;
he got off the train and spent the day hunting him up to thank him
for the Salvation he had received through the gift of one of those
Testaments. He, too, shall surely receive wages.
A letter of cheer and sympathy sent to a distant, lonely reaper in
some far-away field will often hearten the worker and hasten the
ingathering of the harvest.
5. Finally, we can all aid in the reaping of the harvest by watchful
diligence and expectant faith in prayer.
Did not Jesus command us to pray the Lord of the harvest to send
forth laborers? And shall we not fulfill so simple and yet so urgent
a command?
Multitudes cannot go to fields of active service; many have but
little, if any, money to send; but all can pray and plead His
promises till He rain righteousness upon the earth.
I know a man intimately who offered himself for foreign service, but
was rejected; then he sought and obtained the fullness of the
Spirit, and gave himself to prayer and such service as he could
offer at home. God heard and answered his prayers and blessed his
labors, and today he hears from the four corners of the earth of
those who have been saved and sanctified and blessed through things
he has said and done.
God will be well pleased with those who pray, and will bless them,
and will visit with grace the ends of the earth in answer to their
petitions, and they shall surely receive wages.
O Lord, pour out the spirit of prayer upon Thy people, and help us
to win the world to Thee!
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