The harvest is plentiful,
but the labourers are few; therefore ask the Lord of the harvest to send out
labourers into his harvest. (Mt. 9: 37-38)
The end of chapter 9 is a turning
point in the book of Matthew. Up to this point Jesus is the preacher, teacher,
and healer, the sole missionary if you will. In chapter 10, the disciples are summoned
and sent out to preach and share the gospel. The note in my study Bible suggests
that the verses are directed to the Matthean community because they are not
engaged in mission or sharing the good news, and they should be. Here they
receive a how-to manual.
Before the how-to manual we
have verse 37-38 of Chapter 9. It teaches us three important things:
Abundance – the harvest
is plentiful
How often do we go into the
world with a perception that the world is out to get us? That there are
scammers and thieves lying in wait? We go out suspicious of groups or those who
are other? Are we not clouded in fear or anxiety, convinced the world is
falling apart – with gangs, narcissism, apathy, drugs, violence?
For the non-farmers among us,
harvest is the product of much work. Someone cleared the land, prepared the
soil, planted seeds, tended the plants, weeded, picked bugs, worried that the
plants would bear produce. And now after all that hard work, it is harvest
time. And it was a good growing season - the right amount of sun and rain –
worries can be set aside as there is an abundance of produce. Plentiful!
Before Jesus, before the
disciples, before Matthew’s community the farming was done.
There is now a plentiful
harvest. How often do we go into the world with a perception that God is
already there? That there are people waiting to hear that they are loved and
welcomed and belong? That someone cares? That there is freedom from bondage, redemption,
and wholeness? Do we go with confidence, passion, and faith that people will
gladly follow if asked, if invited, if given a ride.
Living from a perception of
abundance, this passage makes me think about the harvesting of strawberries in
a bumper crop year. Those are the summers where there are so many berries, you
start picking a row and remain in the same row. No matter how many berries you pick,
and others pick, there are berries that rot on the vine because the harvest can
not be picked fast enough. This kind of harvesting is not onerous. It is a lazy
person’s dream come true – sit in one spot and pick.
The second, important thing to
note, there is an invitation to prayer. – ask the Lord of the harvest to send out
labourers
Pray.
The words of Mother Teresa
sum up the reason so well. She wrote: “I used to pray that God would feed the
hungry, or do this or that, but now I pray that he will guide me to do whatever
I’m supposed to do, what I can do. I used to pray for answers, but now I’m
praying for strength. I used to believe that prayer changes things, but now I
know that prayer changes us and we change things.”
We do that, we regularly ask
in the ‘Prayers of the People’ for courage to serve. We pray in the communion
liturgy that we may ‘give ourselves away as bread for the hungry.’ I wonder if we approach these prayers with the
belief that the prayer will change us. Are we courageous enough to keep
praying? And do we dare to pray for God to send labourers into the harvest –
when we know that means us?
The third point to note is that
labourers go into his harvest. – God’s harvest.
Labourers are not working
for themselves, not working for their own gain or wealth, not working to fill their
church. Labourers are working in God’s abundance in the currency of love,
compassion, mercy, gospel-good-news. The magnitude of the work is as big as
creation– God’s garden flourishes in the proclaiming of the good news of the
kindom and curing every disease and every sickness, along with compassion for
the harassed and helpless.
Dietrich Bonhoeffer in his
Advent reflection, “God Is in the Manger,” wrote,
In total reality, he comes
in the form of the beggar, of the dissolute human child in ragged clothes,
asking for help. He confronts you in every person that you meet. As long as
there are people, Christ will walk the earth as your neighbour, as the one through
whom God calls you, speaks to you, makes demands on you.
God, in Christ, is already
in the abundance of the harvest. The Matthean community – we- are being invited
into that harvest.
And get this, the harvest is
so abundant, labourers are so needed –
You can sign up as a lazy
picker and still cause change in your part of the berry patch.
You can pick one spot. You
can sit on your butt. And you can participate in the harvest.
I don’t know about you, but
I really do not like to see fruits or vegetables of any kind go to waste. I am saddened when berries rot in the field. This
passage is talking about God’s harvest. I don’t want to see people rot in the
field, - succumbing to hopelessness, loneliness, worry, anger, marginalization,
guilt - because I am walking in the world thinking it is out to get me, rather
than living by grace through faith and sharing good news.
So here is a challenge for
this faith community – if we each were ‘lazy pickers,’ this part of God’s
harvest would get underway:
So here it is -
Choose a few hours each week
– or a day or two- through the summer to be at the church. Open the doors so people
can peek in or perhaps stop and pray for a moment or two. Talk with those who
come in and welcome them. As they leave share a “Peace be with you.”
Sit on the church steps or
at the picnic table - say ‘hello’ to the passersby. Welcome and be open to conversation.
Have some sidewalk chalk and
colour the street with words and pictures of welcome and wholeness. Blow
bubbles with those interested. Bring cookies and share.
Whatever you do be present in
the harvest.
And in this harvest you and
the neighbourhood will be abundantly blessed.
The harvest is plentiful,
but the labourers are few; therefore ask the Lord of the harvest to send out
labourers into his harvest.
