Are you ready to work? (Matthew 9:37-38) February 22, 2016

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Today’s Bible reading plan:

Read it in a year – Genesis 28-31

see the whole year’s plan [here](http://www.bible-reading.com/bible-plan.pdf)

Today’s Devotional

Matthew 9:37-38
Jesus understood what an awesome task was before Him, so He said to His disciples, “The harvest is plentiful but the workers are few. Ask the Lord of the harvest to send more workers into His harvest field.”

What do Jesus’ words mean for us today?

When I was much, much younger, I worked on a couple of farms just enough to realize I never wanted to be a farmer. I think the worst couple of days was helping load baled hay onto a hay truck. The harvest was plentiful and the workers were far too few. Those bales got heavier as the day wore on and the bed of the truck must have been on hydraulic lifts that pushed it ten feet higher in the air. By the time we cleared the field of those bales, I could barely move.

Helping with livestock wasn’t much better. Slopping hogs or staring down a cow that weighs as much as my car isn’t my idea of a fun day. To all you farmers out there, my hat’s off to you. I don’t know how you do it. It’s hard back-breaking work without much return on investment other than seeing God at work through your labor. Of course, all of us could use a little more of taking time to admire the miracle of harvest time. Just the thought that crops grow from a seeds is a little mind boggling. After multiple courses in biology and chemistry, I can tell you the theories and mechanics, but what a miracle!

Just take time to hold a seed in your hand and look at the plant that comes from it. Take any seed. It doesn’t matter, but imagine an acorn and an oak tree. Or a pecan and its tree. Or a watermelon seed and the vine that produces a crop of melons. Can you imagine the Great Designer that put all that in place just perfectly for us? God is a magnificent Creator!

Back to Jesus’ words. We distance ourselves from harvest time today by getting our meat and potatoes from the grocery. A large percentage of us don’t even go to the produce aisles, we just get our vegetables in a can. So harvest means nothing to us. Our meat is neatly packaged in little white trays with plastic wrap on it so we can see how fresh it is. We never see the animal the meat comes from or the fields in which our fruit and vegetables grow.

But in Jesus’ day everyone knew what harvest was like. Everyone knew what farming and taking care of livestock was like. Everyone had a small garden in their yard. That’s how they lived. It’s how they got the majority of their vegetables. Most people had some chickens for eggs and a maybe a goat for milk or a couple of sheep for wool. In the cities, animals were everywhere. They didn’t appear on the streets just for transportation, they were a way of life for everyone. The disciples understood about harvest and workers in the field. But the metaphor might have caught them a little off guard.

You see, Jesus talked about souls. He talked about bringing a harvest of people into the Kingdom of God. The world was filling with people as He looked out over the mountainsides filled with villages and cities growing up under the influence of Roman rule. So many came into this tiny crossroads of the world traveling between Europe and Africa, from Persia and India to Egypt. This was the center for all international travelers. Everyone came through here.

Jesus saw these souls wandering aimlessly through life without direction, without hope. He had the answer. He was the answer. But He needed others to get the message out. He needed the disciples to believe, grasp His message of love and surrender to God. He needed more mouths than His to tell the story. He needed more feet than His to carry the message. He needed more hands than His to help the hurting. He needed more than just Him to show God to the lost and dying souls all around Him.

We often jump up and say, “I’ll be one of those workers! Let me work in your fields!” But I think back to my few experiences of farm life and know that harvesting is hard work. That metaphor sticks in the spiritual world, too. A lot of people jump up and wave their hands to volunteer, but when they find out about the sweat and tears and investment in others lives, they quietly sneak out the gate at the side of the field and disappear. What happened to the enthusiasm? What happened to the great cry to win the lost? What happened to mass of people in our churches who said they would volunteer but then don’t show up when it counts?

Talking with my fellow ministers, it’s not a problem in just my church or my denomination. If 15% of your congregation are fully engaged in ministering to others, you are truly blessed. That doesn’t mean giving up your job, it means saying “yes” when God has a task for you to do. It means doing the things Jesus talked about in the Sermon on the Mount. It means living the “Be Attitudes” for others to see the transformation He makes in our lives when we really let Him be Lord.

You see, the Lord of the harvest needs workers, not spectators. He needs people who are not afraid to get their hands dirty, deal with the messy issues of broken lives, love the unlovable. He did it for you, can we reciprocate? Are you ready to work?

The Voice Bible Copyright © 2012 Thomas Nelson, Inc. The Voice™ translation © 2012 Ecclesia Bible Society All rights reserved.
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