The Farmer Who Is Not Stingy with His Seed

Encore Post: God’s ways are not our ways. That could be said to be a theme of these Sundays. Having been able to jump into a couple of tractors during planting season, I thought it absolutely amazing how much information the farmer had concerning his fields. The guy had harvest data from the last 5 years downloaded to his screen. The planter was able to adjust the amount of seed that was dropping into the ground based upon the data. If in previous years a particular area had a poor yield, the planter was not going to drop as many seeds. But in area where there was a bumper crop, well certainly the seeds were dropping. You don’t waste seed on poor soil. You get what you get but you bet the farm on the good soil. That’s why every farm tests his soil, and nurtures it with the various chemicals and lye. He wants to make the land more fertile than before. It would be a horrible idea to expect to have a bumper crop from the seeds that fell on the hardened earth of the tractor path for instance. You expect the crop from the fertile well cultivated land.

And God is not so stingy with his seed, which is His Word. You and I have fallen victim to believing that some people are beyond the word of God. That we have judged someone to be hard ground, that we don’t throw the seed which we all have been called to sow while we live in this world. Pastors of course are important sowers of the Word, the pastor is the one who is publicly called to proclaim the word of God in church He has been called. But too often people think it is only the pastor’s job to speak the Word of God, that congregation members don’t have that responsibly also placed upon them. That it’s not part of their calling as the Lord’s Christians. Thus, we by our own thinking, have hardened our own hearts to the word of God. We play the hard ground. Because we despise the command to speak this word to our children. We fail to take His call seriously. Repent.

Yet, the Lord is not so stingy with His seed. He does not go only one time and cast His seed. But more often than not, His Word is thrown out again, sown by one his messengers, by one of his Christians. The Word being heard and held on to for dear life. And by God’s grace alone, faith sprouts in the heart of this hearer and good fruit ripens along the way. Solely by God’s grace. And it could have been someone whom you and I both thought was too far gone, was not deserving of hearing the Word of God, perhaps because of their original rejection of His Word.

We would try to calculate. We want to have the data, we want the program to follow. We want great results. So we put our seed out to those who we think are ‘ready.’ Yet, we don’t know who is ready and who is not. Only God knows, for He is the one who prepares hearts.

But, we go into an evangelism program, trying to attract new people maybe by being relevant. We try to reinvent ourselves because that is what everyone is saying to do in order to grow. We, too worried by the things of this world, are called to repent. Yes, repent of your worrisome attitudes. God will grow His church the way He always has, by the pure preaching of His saving Word and the right and proper administration of His sacraments. His Word will do what He promised.

For the Lord will bear the harvest, even in places that you and I might not think they would come from. And in those people that we expect faith, unfortunately, it usally is wanting. And those who we would be apprehensive to share our faith with? We are humbled and watch God create faith in a person we would call the path. Why? I do not know. This is the doctrine of grace alone. It is a mystery. Our ways are not God’s way. Yet, we should rejoice in the gift of God’s Word because He does take it away. It His great grace and mercy that He has not taken away His Word, as much as we deserve to be in a famine of His Word for constant sins against it, particularly the sin of unbelief and rebellion. Yet, He continues to send His messengers, to proclaim His Word. And by such proclamation, faith is created. For with His Word also goes His Spirit. By His Word, the Holy Spirit works and creates faith. This is how you are called to faith. The Holy Spirit calls you by the very Gospel. Conversion and creation of faith is a work of God alone, don’t think otherwise.

Consider the grace of God further. God sent His messengers to sinful Israel knowing full well many of them would die for the word they proclaimed. Yet He did not stop sending his prophets. And even after these men were killed, He did not stop, but in fact sent His own Son, the very Word of God made flesh into the world. He also died, but as He promised, He rose from the dead. His Word is different than the cries of Abel the first to die for his faith. Abel cried out for justice and revenge. Christ’s Word rings out, “Forgive them Father for they know not what they do.” Forgiveness is the word. You are saved, by grace. And this grace is received. It is given to you.

Receive this grace into your hearts. Trust His Word. Cling to it for your life. And produce the fruits that come from a faith in Christ. That begins here. Faithfully hear His word preached in your ear. Receive His Supper faithfully. That via both the preached Word and the tangible Word of Christ that is the Sacraments, the Word would go into your heart, and the Spirit accompanying it may root out all the stones that are in your still cold and rocky heart of yours, and strengthen you in this faith. And thus produce even more fruit. For you need Christ’s love and grace put within you if you truly desire to love your brother, sister, mother. If you have not love, how can you say you are of God, because God is love?

The more you hear the Word of God, the more you immerse yourself in it, the more time you take to actually read it and put His Word on your lips, the more likely it will actually change the way you look at life, the way you act, and ultimately the way you look at Christ Himself. His grace knows no bounds. He does stop throwing the seed, nor does His Spirit stop working either. So being His children, neither should, nor should we judge who deserves this Word or not. It is not up for us to decide. If Jesus spoke to and made his biggest human enemy Saul of Tarsus into his most avid confessors, then anyone in this world can be brought to faith and should not be counted out. As long as it is today, it is the day of salvation.

I have said this before, the Lord is a farmer at heart. He desires the greatest harvest. So, the Lord Jesus still sends His Sowers into His field. Even though the harvest is great, there is more sowing to be done. And its not just the called and ordained pastor’s job to do that. You have the responsibility and obligation to teach the Word of God to your children. And you have opportunities to toss the seed toward your neighbors. It may not feel like much at all when you have the opportunity. You may feel like you have blown it, but the Lord’s Word never returns to Him void. It will ultimately do what He purposed it do. And the times you think you are throwing seed straight to the birds, maybe you are, but only truly God knows. Because He is not stingy with His Word, neither should we be stingy with it. For all need to hear the Word of Christ be to saved. For faith comes by hearing.

As the seasons change, and the harvest seems imminent let us not lose our focus. Let not us not lose hope, waiting for Him to reap His harvest. But rather trust all the more in the one who has done everything He has promised He would do: come, die, and rise. Surely, He who has done all this for our salvation will do what He has promised. So, keep receiving His grace this day, hear His Word, gladly learn it. That by His wondrous grace, you will be kept ready for the day He bears the harvest home.

In the Name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.

Rev. Jacob Hercamp
St. Peter’s Lutheran Church
La Grange, MO

©2022 Jacob Hercamp. All rights reserved. Permission granted to copy, share and display freely for non-commercial purposes. Direct all other rights and permissions inquiries to cosmithb@gmail.com

Love

Encore Post: In American culture, love is everywhere. It is a constant theme of movies, TV programs, stories, songs, poetry and even commercials! At Valentine’s Day especially, images of couples planning romantic moments are everywhere. At some point in the dating life of many lovers, men and women obsess over whether they should tell their dates that they love them.

But the English word love is more than that. We love our pets, our favorite food, good weather, our sports teams, our friends, freedom and truth — just about everything. The Greek language of the New Testament uses several words to cover it all. φιλέω (phileo) is the love and affection between friends. ἔρος (Eros) is sexual love that is obsessed with another and is not satisfied until it gets what it wants. ἀγαπάω is a love that sacrifices for the good of the one it loves. (See 1 Corinthians 13) ἀγαπάω is the word the New Testament uses for God’s love and the love God wants us to show to him and our neighbors.

God loved us before he made the world. (Ephesians 1:4-5) He loved us so much that he sacrificed his only Son to save us. (John 3:16-17) Because he first loved us, we love him and want to please him. He commands us to love him and our neighbors. Jesus tells us that the whole of God’s law is to love God and our neighbors as ourselves. (Matthew 22:37-40) In a very real sense, our love is itself God’s gift to us. While our love in this world is not perfect, God’s love for us is perfect. It lasts forever and conquers even death.

©2018 Robert E. Smith. All rights reserved. Permission granted to copy, share and display freely for non-commercial purposes. Direct all other rights and permissions inquiries to cosmithb@gmail.com

God is Hands On

Encore Post: Benjamin Franklin, like many of the leading thinkers of his time, liked to compare God to a clockmaker. God was a master craftsman. He skillfully formed the many precision parts of creation. Like the clockmaker, he assembled his ingenious machine, each piece carefully assembled, balanced and put it in its proper place. He then wound it up and set it in motion. He then left it alone, only rarely touching it to clean it. God, Franklin thought, was watching us — from a distance.

While God is indeed a great craftsman, he is not distant at all. The Scripture tells us he is involved in every detail of our lives. He maintains the distance between Sun and Earth with precision. He controls the seasons, rains and all its rhythms. His providence gives us all we have and need to live and enjoy our lives. Some it he does directly, others using the people, things and creatures in this world. He even contains the evil our sins let loose in this world.

We tend not to notice all these ordinary miracles and are tempted to believe our blessings come from our own efforts. When things do not go well, we then blame God as if he doesn’t care about us. We can’t comprehend that God can permit sin and evil in the world without being its cause. This is another of the mysteries that we run into when we try to understand our creator.

This is why it is good to build thanksgiving to God into our daily lives, when we wake, when we eat, when we worship and when sleep. Most especially it is good to thank him for his mercy in Christ Jesus.

Blog Post Series

©2018 Robert E. Smith. All rights reserved. Permission granted to copy, share and display freely for non-commercial purposes. Direct all other rights and permissions inquiries to cosmithb@gmail.com

Presentation of our Lord

Encore Post: Childbirth was an exciting and frightening event at the time of Jesus. Many children and their mothers died soon after a birth. When both mother and child survived the ordeal, God’s law required male children to be circumcised on the eighth day following their birth. After forty days — when the greatest danger to the life of the mother and the child had passed, they were to present themselves at the temple to make a sacrifice. For the woman, this sacrifice made her clean again and able to return to worship God.

During the time of Jesus, Rabbis gathered in the temple in the court of the women, the closest to the Holy of Holies a woman was allowed to go. They would take each child in their arms and bless them. So it was that the Holy Spirit directed Simeon to Joseph, Mary and Jesus. The Spirit revealed to Simeon that Jesus was the coming Messiah. By the prophecy given to Him, Simeon pointed to Jesus’ mission to save both Jews and Gentiles and to the cross. Simeon’s song of joy is still sung by the church in worship.

Anna was a prophetess, like Miriam and Deborah, one of very few women God used to speak to His people. She likely served in the temple to help with a variety of tasks. In her devotion to God, she also saw Jesus and had the privilege of telling everyone that the Messiah had come.

On February 2, the Church celebrates the presentation of Jesus in the temple and the singing of Simeon’s song, known as the Nunc Dimittis. We also sing this song every time we celebrate the Lord’s Supper.

©2018 Robert E. Smith. All rights reserved. Permission granted to copy, share and display freely for non-commercial purposes. Direct all other rights and permissions inquiries to cosmithb@gmail.com