Let me start by making sure we understand the agricultural
terms I will be using. Before the days of mechanized wheat combines that do
everything except bake the bread, people used simple tools to complete the
process of getting wheat from the field to the oven. First the wheat was cut
down by reapers with a sickle and bound in bunches called sheaves. The sheaves
were taken to a hard surface – a threshing floor – and either beaten with
sticks or trodden by animals. Once the grains of wheat were released from the
stalk and hull, people used a large fork – the winnowing fork – and tossed the
grain and chaff into the air so the wind could blow away the unwanted elements.
The remaining grain fell to the threshing floor and could then be scooped up to
be ground into flour for baking. Whew!
Who cares? I care because the imagery of harvesting grain is
used throughout the Bible to describe the experience of believers. In Matthew
13, Jesus shares the parable of the weeds in the wheat. Jesus explains to
his questioning disciples that the wheat represents believers and the weeds are
“sons of the evil one.” He explains that, “at the end of the age” His angels
will sort out the weeds from the wheat. This is usually interpreted to refer to
judgment at the end of time.
I believe there is another possible interpretation. God has
been separating weeds from wheat throughout the history of His people. It began
with driving Cain away from his family. Then there was the major drama of the
flood which saved a tiny remnant. Time and again God used separating forces to
separate a people to Himself: plagues, serpents, earthquakes, Assyrians,
Babylonians. God’s winnowing fork has been dipping into history from the
beginning.
Each of the instances mentioned above were in the midst of
God’s redemption story confirming the fact that His selection process will not
be suspended until the Last Day. A note in the Faithlife Study Bible on Daniel 8:17 says that, “In apocalyptic
literature, references to end times can connote the cessation of a
particular activity [italics mine], a future period of God’s wrath
manifested in judgment, or the end of time.” Many are predicting that the
long-term effects of the COVID 19 restrictions will mark the “cessation of a particular
activity,” namely, life as we have known it. I suspect God is using this
situation to accomplish His will. (Of course He is; He always is.)
I have begun to wonder if the effects “social distancing” are
more significant than the virus itself. Death from the virus is tragic. But one
must be clear-headed. Far more people died from the Spanish
Flu in the last century than the highest estimates of predicted deaths from
COVID 19: the Spanish Flu took perhaps 50 million worldwide and over 600,000 in
the US alone. Tens of thousands have died from flu each year since 2012. More
recently, between 60,000 and 80,000 people died in the
2017 flu season in the US. (Statistics are hard to pin down.) Outside of
the individual tragedies that families and friends suffered in those events,
little changed in society as a whole.
Social distancing and shutdowns make things different in
this COVID 19 crisis; certainly, anyone who depends on an income from work is
being greatly affected. Those of us who have other means of living are inconvenienced
by closed stores and such, but we are not going to be destitute. The long-term
effects, however, are startling. According to one
economist, shutting down the economy will cause between one million and
four-and-one-half million businesses to fold, depending on how long the
shut-down lasts. That will be devastating. Undoubtedly, many people tie their
trust to a job rather than to God. They must be asking, “If I am trusting my
job for my daily bread, what do I do now?
More to the point for believers is the closing of houses of
worship. We have all heard it said -- I have said it here: it is not the
building that constitutes the church; it’s the people. Even though many mouth these
words, there are a great many people who still tie their faith to brick and
mortar. (See “What is
the Church?”) Christian researcher, Barna
, recently revealed that fewer than one in five adults read their Bibles
throughout the week. I suspect the number of families who worship at home
between Sundays is a small fraction of the Bible readers. They must be asking
themselves, “If the only time I worship is “in church,” what do I do now?
With both Sunday worship and daily employment on hold for so
many people, I can imagine God calling us to bring our faith back to where it
belongs: in God and God alone. If God is winnowing out the weak Christians, the
church will be stronger for this crisis. Charles
Spurgeon once said, “We need winds and tempests to exercise our faith, to
tear off the rotten bough of self-dependence, and to root us more firmly in
Christ. The day of evil reveals to us the value of our glorious hope.” We need
God’s perspective now more than ever. Our entire lifespan on earth is an
infinitesimal speck on the calendar of eternity. Pray that as the Heavenly
Reaper threshes and winnows during this crisis, He will find us to be the wheat
of hope, fit to be spiritual bread for His heavenly kingdom here on earth.
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