<h2><SPAN name="WHAT_THE_FARM_LABORERS_CAN_DO_AND" id="WHAT_THE_FARM_LABORERS_CAN_DO_AND">WHAT THE FARM LABORERS CAN DO AND WHAT THEY CANNOT DO.</SPAN></h2>
<p class="small">"And he said, So is the kingdom of God, as if a man should cast seed into
the ground; and should sleep, and rise night and day, and the seed should
spring and grow up, he knoweth not how. For the earth bringeth forth fruit
of herself; first the blade, then the ear, after that the full corn in the ear. But
when the fruit is brought forth, immediately he putteth in the sickle, because
the harvest is come."—<span class="smcap">Mark</span> 4:26-29.</p>
<p class="p2"><span class="smcap">There</span> is a lesson for "laborers together with God."
It is a parable for all who are concerned in the kingdom
of God. It will be of little value to those who are in
the kingdom of darkness, for they are not bidden to
sow the good seed: "Unto the wicked God saith, What
hast thou to do to declare my statutes?" But all who
are commissioned to scatter seed for the Royal Husbandman,
will be glad to know how the harvest is preparing
for him whom they serve. Listen, then, ye that
sow beside all waters; ye that with holy diligence seek
to fill the garners of heaven—listen, and may the Spirit
of God speak into your ears as you are able to bear it.</p>
<p class="p2">I. We shall, first, learn from our text <span class="smcap">what we can
do and what we cannot do</span>. Let this stand as our first
head.</p>
<p>"So is the kingdom of God, as if a man should cast
seed into the ground:" this the gracious worker can
do. "And the seed should spring and grow up, he
knoweth not how:" this is what he cannot do: seed<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[165]</SPAN></span>
once sown is beyond human jurisdiction, and man can
neither make it spring nor grow. Yet ere long the
worker comes in again:—"When the fruit is brought
forth, immediately he putteth in the sickle." We can
reap in due season, and it is both our duty and our privilege
to do so. You see, then, that there is a place for
the worker at the beginning, and though there is no
room for him in the middle passage, yet another opportunity
is given him further on when that which he sowed
has actually yielded fruit.</p>
<p>Notice, then, that <i>we can sow</i>. Any man who has
received the knowledge of the grace of God in his heart
can teach others. I include under the term "man" all
who know the Lord, be they male or female. We cannot
all teach alike, for all have not the same gifts; to
one is given one talent, and to another ten; neither
have we all the same opportunities, for one lives in obscurity
and another has far-reaching influence; yet
there is not within the family of God an infant hand
which may not drop its own tiny seed into the ground.
There is not a man among us who needs to stand idle in
the market-place, for work suitable to his strength is
waiting for him. There is not a saved woman who is
left without a holy task; let her do it and win the approving
word, "She hath done what she could."</p>
<p>We need never quarrel with God because we cannot
do everything, if he only permits us to do this one
thing; for sowing the good seed is a work which will
need all our wit, our strength, our love, our care. Holy
seed sowing should be adopted as our highest pursuit,
and it will be no inferior object for the noblest life.
You will need heavenly teaching that you may carefully
select the wheat, and keep it free from the darnel of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[166]</SPAN></span>
error. You will require instruction to winnow out of
it your own thoughts and opinions; for these may not
be according to the mind of God. Men are not saved
by our word, but by God's word. We need grace to
learn the gospel aright, and to teach the whole of it.
To different men we must, with discretion, bring forward
that part of the word of God which will best bear
upon their consciences; for much may depend upon
the word being <i>in season</i>.</p>
<p>Having selected the seed, we shall have plenty of
work if we go forth and sow it broadcast everywhere,
for every day brings its opportunity, and every company
furnishes its occasion. "In the morning sow thy
seed, and in the evening withhold not thy hand."
"Sow beside all waters."</p>
<p>Still, wise sowers discover favorable opportunities
for sowing, and gladly seize upon them. There are
times when it would clearly be a waste to sow; for the
soil could not receive it, it is not in a fit condition.
After a shower, or before a shower, or at some such
time as he that hath studied husbandry prefers, then
must we be up and doing. While we are to work for
God always, yet there are seasons when it were casting
pearls before swine to talk of holy things, and there are
other times when to be silent would be a great sin.
Sluggards in the time for ploughing and sowing are
sluggards indeed, for they not only waste the day, but
throw away the year. If you watch for souls, and use
hours of happy vantage, and moments of sacred softening,
you will not complain of the scanty space allowed
for agency. Even should you never be called to water,
or to reap, your office is wide enough if you fulfil the
work of the sower.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[167]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>For little though it seem to teach the simple truth
of the gospel, yet it is essential. How shall men hear
without a teacher? Servants of God, the seed of the
word is not like thistle-down, which is borne by every
wind; but the wheat of the kingdom needs a human
hand to sow it, and without such agency it will not
enter into men's hearts, neither can it bring forth fruit
to the glory of God. The preaching of the gospel is
the necessity of every age; God grant that our country
may never be deprived of it. Even if the Lord should
send us a famine of bread and of water, may he never
send us a famine of the word of God. Faith cometh by
hearing, and how can there be hearing if there is no
teaching? Scatter ye, scatter ye, then, the seed of the
kingdom, for this is essential to the harvest.</p>
<p>This seed should be sown often, for many are the
foes of the wheat, and if you repeat not your sowing
you may never see a harvest. The seed must be sown
everywhere, too, for there are no choice corners of the
world that you can afford to let alone, in the hope that
they will be self-productive. You may not leave the
rich and intelligent under the notion that surely the
gospel will be found among them, for it is not so: the
pride of life leads them away from God. You may not
leave the poor and illiterate, and say, "Surely they will
of themselves feel their need of Christ." Not so: they
will sink from degradation to degradation unless you
uplift them with the gospel. No tribe of man, no peculiar
constitution of the human mind, may be neglected
by us; but everywhere we must preach the word, in
season and out of season. I have heard that Captain
Cook, the celebrated circumnavigator, in whatever part
of the earth he landed, took with him a little packet of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[168]</SPAN></span>
English seeds, and scattered them in suitable places.
He would leave the boat and wander up from the shore.
He said nothing, but quietly scattered the seeds wherever
he went, so that he belted the world with the flowers
and herbs of his native land. Imitate him wherever
you go; sow spiritual seed in every place that your foot
shall tread upon.</p>
<p>Let us now think of what you cannot do. <i>You cannot,
after the seed has left your hand, cause it to put forth
life.</i> I am sure you cannot make it grow, for you do
not know how it grows. The text saith, "And the seed
should spring and grow up, he knoweth not how."
That which is beyond the range of our knowledge is
certainly beyond the reach of our power. Can you
make a seed germinate? You may place it under circumstances
of damp and heat which will cause it to
swell and break forth with a shoot, but the germination
itself is beyond you. How is it done? We know not.
After the germ has been put forth, can you make it
further grow, and develop its life into leaf and stem?
No; that, too, is out of your power. And when the
green, grassy blade has been succeeded by the ear, can
you ripen it? It will be ripened; but can <i>you</i> do it?
You know you cannot; you can have no finger in the
actual process, though you may promote the conditions
under which it is carried on. Life is a mystery; growth
is a mystery; ripening is a mystery: and these three
mysteries are as fountains sealed against all intrusion.
How comes it that there is within the ripe seed the
preparations for another sowing and another growth?
What is this vital principle, this secret reproducing
energy? Knowest thou anything about this? The
philosopher may talk about chemical combinations, and
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[169]</SPAN></span>
he may proceed to quote analogies from this and that;
but still the growth of the seed remains a secret; it
springs up, he knoweth not how. Certainly this is true
of the rise and progress of the life of God in the heart.
It enters the soul, and roots itself we know not how.
Naturally men hate the word, but it enters and it
changes their hearts, so that they come to love it; yet
we know not how. Their whole nature is renewed, so
that instead of producing sin it yields repentance, faith,
and love; but we know not how. How the Spirit of
God deals with the mind of man, how he creates the
new heart and the right spirit, how we are begotten
again unto a lively hope, we cannot tell. The Holy
Ghost enters into us; we hear not his voice, we see not
his light, we feel not his touch; yet he worketh an
effectual work upon us, which we are not long in perceiving.
We know that the work of the Spirit is a new
creation, a resurrection, a quickening from the dead;
but all these words are only covers to our utter ignorance
of the mode of his working, with which it is not in
our power to meddle. We do not know how he performs
his miracles of love, and, not knowing how he
works, we may be quite sure that we cannot take the
work out of his hands. We cannot create, we cannot
quicken, we cannot transform, we cannot regenerate,
we cannot save.</p>
<p>This work of God having proceeded in the growth
of the seed, what next? <i>We can reap the ripe ears.</i> After
a season God the Holy Spirit uses his servants again.
As soon as the living seed has produced first of all the
blade of thought, and afterwards the green ear of conviction,
and then faith, which is as full corn in the ear,
then the Christian worker comes in for further service,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[170]</SPAN></span>
for <i>he can reap</i>. "When the fruit is brought forth, immediately
he putteth in the sickle." This is not the
reaping of the last great day, for that does not come
within the scope of the parable, which evidently relates
to a human sower and reaper. The kind of reaping
which the Saviour here intends is that which he referred
to when he said to his disciples, "Lift up your eyes,
and look on the fields; for they are white already to
harvest." After he had been sowing the seed in the
hearts of the Samaritans, and it had sprung up, so that
they began to evince faith in him, the Lord Jesus cried,
"The fields are white to harvest." The apostle saith,
"One soweth, and another reapeth." Our Lord said
to the disciples, "I sent you to reap that whereon ye
bestowed no labor." Is there not a promise, "In due
season we shall reap, if we faint not"?</p>
<p>Christian workers begin their harvest work by
watching for signs of faith in Christ. They are eager
to see the blade, and delighted to mark the ripening
ear. They often hope that men are believers, but they
long to be sure of it; and when they judge that at last
the fruit of faith is put forth, they begin to encourage,
to congratulate, and to comfort. They know that the
young believer needs to be housed in the barn of Christian
fellowship, that he may be saved from a thousand
perils. No wise farmer leaves the fruit of the field long
exposed to the hail which might beat it out, or to the
mildew which might destroy it, or to the birds which
might devour it. Evidently no believing man should
be left outside of the garner of holy fellowship; he
should be carried into the midst of the church with all
the joy which attends the home-bringing of sheaves.
The worker for Christ watches carefully, and when he
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[171]</SPAN></span>
discerns that his time is come, he begins at once to fetch
in the converts, that they may be cared for by the
brotherhood, separated from the world, screened from
temptation, and laid up for the Lord. He is diligent to
do it at once, because the text saith, "immediately he
putteth in the sickle." He does not wait for months in
cold suspicion; he is not afraid that he shall encourage
too soon when faith is really present. He comes with
the word of promise and the smile of brotherly love at
once, and he says to the new believer, "Have you confessed
your faith? Is not the time come for an open
confession? Hath not Jesus bidden the believer to be
baptized? If you love him, keep his commandments."
He does not rest till he has introduced the convert to
the communion of the faithful. For our work, beloved,
is but half done when men are made disciples and
baptized. We have then to encourage, to instruct, to
strengthen, to console, and succor in all times of difficulty
and danger. What saith the Saviour? "Go ye
therefore, and make disciples of all the nations, baptizing
them into the name of the Father, and of the Son,
and of the Holy Ghost: teaching them to observe all
things whatsoever I have commanded you."</p>
<p>Observe, then, the sphere and limit of agency. We
can introduce the truth to men, but that truth the Lord
himself must bless; the living and growing of the word
within the soul is of God alone. When the mystic work
of growth is done, we are able to garner the saved ones
in the church. For Christ to be formed in men the hope
of glory is not of our working, that remains with God;
but, when Jesus Christ is formed in them, to discern the
image of the Saviour and to say, "Come in, thou blessed
of the Lord, wherefore standest thou without?" this is<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[172]</SPAN></span>
our duty and delight. To create the divine life is
God's, to cherish it is ours. To cause the hidden life to
grow is the work of the Lord; to see the uprising and
development of that life and to harvest it is the work
of the faithful, even as it is written, "When the fruit
is brought forth, immediately he putteth in the sickle,
because the harvest is come."</p>
<p>This, then, is our first lesson; we see what we can
do and what we cannot do.</p>
<p class="p2">II. Our second head is like unto the first, and
consists of <span class="smcap">what we can know and what we cannot
know</span>.</p>
<p>First, <i>what we can know</i>. We can know when we
have sown the good seed of the word that it will grow;
for God has promised that it shall do so. Not every
grain in every place; for some will go to the bird, and
some to the worm, and some to be scorched by the sun;
but, as a general rule, God's word shall not return unto
him void, it shall prosper in the thing whereto he hath
sent it. This we can know. And we can know that
the seed when once it takes root will continue to grow;
that it is not a dream or a picture that will disappear,
but a thing of force and energy, which will advance
from a grassy blade to corn in the ear, and under God's
blessing will develop to actual salvation, and be as the
"full corn in the ear." God helping and blessing it,
our work of teaching will not only lead men to thought
and conviction, but to conversion and eternal life.</p>
<p>We also can know, because we are told so, that the
reason for this is mainly because there is life in the
word. In the word of God itself there is life, for it is
written—"The word of God is quick and powerful,"<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[173]</SPAN></span>
that is, "living and powerful." It is "the incorruptible
seed which liveth and abideth for ever." It is the
nature of living seeds to grow; and the reason why
the word of God grows in men's hearts is because it
is the living word of the living God, and where the word
of a king is there is power. We know this, because the
Scriptures teach us so. Is it not written, "Of his own
will begat he us by the word of truth"?</p>
<p>Moreover, the earth, which is here the type of the
man, "bringeth forth fruit of herself." We must mind
what we are at in expounding this, for human hearts do
not produce faith of themselves; they are as hard rock
on which the seed perishes. But it means this—that as
the earth under the blessing of the dew and the rain is,
by God's secret working upon it, made to take up and
embrace the seed, so the heart of man is made ready to
receive and enfold the gospel of Jesus Christ within
itself. Man's awakened heart wants exactly what the
word of God supplies. Moved by a divine influence the
soul embraces the truth, and is embraced by it, and so
the truth lives in the heart, and is quickened by it.
Man's love accepts the love of God; man's faith
wrought in him by the Spirit of God believes the truth
of God; man's hope wrought in him by the Holy Ghost
lays hold upon the things revealed, and so the heavenly
seed grows in the soil of the soul. The life comes not
from you who preach the word, but it is placed within
the word which you preach by the Holy Spirit. The life
is not in your hand, but in the heart which is led to take
hold upon the truth by the Spirit of God. Salvation
comes not from the personal authority of the preacher,
but through the personal conviction, personal faith,
and personal love of the hearer. So much as this<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[174]</SPAN></span>
we may know, and is it not enough for all practical
purposes?</p>
<p>Still, there is <i>a something which we cannot know</i>, a
secret into which we cannot pry. I repeat what I have
said before: you cannot look into men's inward parts
and see exactly how the truth takes hold upon the
heart, or the heart takes hold upon the truth. Many have
watched their own feelings till they have become blind
with despondency, and others have watched the feelings
of the young till they have done them rather harm
than good by their rigorous supervision. In God's
work there is more room for faith than for sight. The
heavenly seed grows secretly. You must bury it out of
sight, or there will be no harvest. Even if you keep the
seed above ground, and it does sprout, you cannot
discover <i>how</i> it grows; even though you microscopically
watched its swelling and bursting, you could not see
the inward vital force which moves the seed. Thou
knowest not the way of the Spirit. His work is wrought
in secret. "Explain the new birth," says somebody.
My answer is, "Experience the new birth, and you
shall know what it is." There are secrets into which
we cannot enter, for their light is too bright for mortal
eyes to endure. O man, thou canst not become omniscient,
for thou art a creature, and not the Creator.
For thee there must ever be a region not only unknown
but unknowable. So far shall thy knowledge go, but
no farther; and thou mayest thank God it is so, for
thus he leaves room for faith, and gives cause for prayer.
Cry mightily unto the Great Worker to do what thou
canst not attempt to perform, that so, when thou seest
men saved, thou mayest give the Lord all the glory
evermore.</p>
<p class="p2"><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[175]</SPAN></span></p>
<p class="p2">III. Thirdly, our text tells us <span class="smcap">what we may expect
if we work for God, and what we may not expect</span>.
According to this parable <i>we may expect to see fruit</i>. The
husbandman casts his seed into the ground: the seed
springs and grows, and he naturally expects a harvest.
I wish I could say a word to stir up the expectations of
Christian workers; for I fear that many work without
faith. If you had a garden or a field, and you sow seed
in it, you would be very greatly surprised and grieved
if it did not come up at all; but many Christian people
seem quite content to work on without expectation of
result. This is a pitiful kind of working—pulling up
empty buckets by the year together. Surely, I must
either see some result for my labor and be glad, or else,
failing to see it, I must be ready to break my heart if
I be a true servant of the great Master. We ought to
have expected results; if we had expected more we
should have seen more; but a lack of expectation has
been a great cause of failure in God's workers.</p>
<p><i>But we may not expect to see all the seed which we sow
spring up the moment we sow it.</i> Sometimes, glory be to
God, we have but to deliver the word, and straightway
men are converted: the reaper overtakes the sower, in
such instances; but it is not always so. Some sowers have
been diligent for years upon their plots of ground, and
yet apparently all has been in vain; at last the harvest
has come, a harvest which, speaking after the manner of
men, had never been reaped if they had not persevered
to the end. This world, as I believe, is to be converted
to Christ; but not to-day, nor to-morrow, peradventure
not for many an age; but the sowing of the centuries is
not being lost, it is working on toward the grand ultimatum.
A crop of mushrooms may soon be produced;<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[176]</SPAN></span>
but a forest of oaks will not reward the planter till generations
of his children have mouldered in the dust. It
is ours to sow, and to hope for quick reaping; but still
we ought to remember that "the husbandman waiteth
for the precious fruit of the earth, and hath long patience
for it, until he receive the early and latter rain,"
and so must we. We are to expect results, but not to
be dispirited if we have to wait for them.</p>
<p>We are also to expect to see the good seed grow,
but <i>not always after our fashion</i>. Like children, we are
apt to be impatient. Your little boy sowed mustard
and cress yesterday in his garden. This afternoon
Johnny will be turning over the ground to see if the
seed is growing. There is no probability that his mustard
and cress will come to anything, for he will not let
it alone long enough for it to grow. So is it with hasty
workers; they must see the result of the gospel directly,
or else they distrust the blessed word. Certain preachers
are in such a hurry that they will allow no time
for thought, no space for counting the cost, no opportunity
for men to consider their ways and turn to the
Lord with full purpose of heart. All other seeds take
time to grow, but the seed of the word must grow before
the speaker's eyes like magic, or he thinks nothing
has been done. Such good brethren are so eager to
produce blade and ear there and then, that they roast
their seed in the fire of fanaticism, and it perishes.
They make men think that they are converted, and thus
effectually hinder them from coming to a saving knowledge
of the truth. Some men are prevented from being
saved by being told that they are saved already, and by
being puffed up with a notion of perfection when they are
not even broken in heart. Perhaps if such people had
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[177]</SPAN></span>
been taught to look for something deeper they might
not have been satisfied with receiving seed on stony
ground; but now they exhibit a rapid development,
and an equally rapid decline and fall. Let us believingly
expect to see the seed grow; but let us look to see
it advance after the manner of the preacher—firstly,
secondly, thirdly: first the blade, then the ear, then
the full corn in the ear.</p>
<p>We may expect also to see the seed ripen. Our
works will by God's grace lead up to real faith in those
he hath wrought upon by his word and Spirit; but <i>we
must not expect to see it perfect at first</i>. How many mistakes
have been made here. Here is a young person under
impression, and some good, sound brother talks with
the trembling beginner, and asks profound questions.
He shakes his experienced head, and knits his furrowed
brows. He goes into the corn-field to see how the crops
are prospering, and though it is early in the year, he
laments that he cannot see an ear of corn; indeed, he
perceives nothing but mere grass. "I cannot see a
trace of corn," says he. No, brother, of course you
cannot; for you will not be satisfied with the blade as
an evidence of life, but must insist upon seeing everything
at full growth at once. If you had looked for the
blade you would have found it; and it would have encouraged
you. For my own part, I am glad even to
perceive a faint desire, a feeble longing, a degree of
uneasiness, or a measure of weariness of sin, or a craving
after mercy. Will it not be wise for you, also, to
allow things to begin at the beginning, and to be satisfied
with their being small at the first? See the blade
of desire, and then watch for more. Soon you shall see a
little more than desire; for there shall be conviction and
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[178]</SPAN></span>
resolve, and after that a feeble faith, small as a mustard
seed, but bound to grow. Do not despise the day of
small things. Do not examine the new-born babe to
see whether he is sound in doctrine after your idea of
soundness; ten to one he is a long way off sound, and
you will only worry the dear heart by introducing
difficult questions. Speak to him about his being a
sinner, and Christ a Saviour, and you will in this way
water him so that his grace in the ear will become the
full corn in the ear. It may be that there is not much
that looks like wheat about him yet; but by-and-by you
shall say, "Wheat! ah, that it is, if I know wheat.
This man is a true ear of corn, and gladly will I place
him among my Master's sheaves." If you cut down
the blades, where will the ears come from? Expect
grace in your converts; but do not look to see glory in
them just yet.</p>
<p class="p2">IV. Under the last head we shall consider <span class="smcap">what
sleep workers may take, and what they may not
take</span>; for it is said of this sowing man, that he sleeps
and rises night and day, and the seed springs and grows
up he knoweth not how. They say a farmer's trade is
a good one because it is going on while he is abed and
asleep; and surely ours is a good trade, too, when we
serve our Master by sowing good seed; for it is growing
even while we are asleep.</p>
<p>But how may a good workman for Christ lawfully
go to sleep? I answer, first, he may sleep the sleep of
<i>restfulness</i> born of confidence. You are afraid the kingdom
of Christ will not come, are you? Who asked you
to tremble for the ark of the Lord? Afraid for the
infinite Jehovah that his purposes will fail? Shame on<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[179]</SPAN></span>
you! Your anxiety dishonors your God. Shall Omnipotence
be defeated? You had better sleep than wake
to play the part of Uzzah. Rest patiently; God's purpose
will be accomplished, his kingdom will come, his
chosen will be saved, and Christ shall see of the travail
of his soul. Take the sweet sleep which God gives to
his beloved, the sleep of perfect confidence, such as Jesus
slept in the hinder part of the ship when it was tossed
with tempest. The cause of God never was in jeopardy,
and never will be; the seed sown is insured by Omnipotence,
and must produce its harvest. In patience
possess your soul, and wait till the harvest comes, for
the pleasure of the Lord must prosper in the hands of
Jesus.</p>
<p>Also take that sleep of <i>joyful expectancy</i> which leads
to a happy waking. Get up in the morning and feel
that the Lord is ruling all things for the attainment of
his own purposes, and the highest benefit of all who put
their trust in him. Look for a blessing by day, and
close your eyes at night calmly expecting to meet
with better things to-morrow. If you do not sleep you
will not wake up in the morning refreshed, and ready
for more work. If it were possible for you to sit up all
night and eat the bread of carefulness you would be unfit
to attend to the service which your Master appoints for
the morning; therefore take your rest and be at peace,
and work with calm dignity, for the matter is safe in the
Lord's hands. Is it not written, "So he giveth his
beloved sleep"?</p>
<p>Take your rest because you have consciously resigned
your work into God's hands. After you have
spoken the word, resort to God in prayer, and commit
the matter into God's hand, and then do not fret<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[180]</SPAN></span>
about it. It cannot be in better keeping, leave it with
him who worketh all in all.</p>
<p>But do not sleep the sleep of unwatchfulness.
The farmer sows his seed, but he does not therefore
forget it. He has to mend his fences, to drive away
birds, to remove weeds, or to prevent floods. He does
not watch the growth of the seed, but he has plenty else
to do. He sleeps, but it is only in due time and measure,
and is not to be confounded with the sluggard's
slumbers. He never sleeps the sleep of indifference, or
even of inaction, for each season has its demand upon
him. He has sown one field, but he has another to
sow. He has sown, but he has also to reap; and if reaping
is done, he has to thresh and to winnow. A farmer's
work is never done, for in one part or the other of the
farm he is needed. His sleep is but a pause that gives
him strength to continue his occupation. The parable
teaches us to do all that lies within our province, but
not to intrude into the domain of God: in teaching to
the era we are to labor diligently, but with regard to
the secret working of truth upon man's mind, we are
to pray and rest, looking to the Lord for the inward
power.</p>
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