<h2><SPAN name="THRESHING" id="THRESHING">THRESHING.</SPAN></h2>
<p class="small">"For the fitches are not threshed with a threshing instrument, neither is a
cart wheel turned about upon the cummin; but the fitches are beaten out with
a staff, and the cummin with a rod. Bread corn is bruised; because he will
not ever be threshing it, nor break it with the wheel of his cart, nor bruise it
with his horsemen."—<span class="smcap">Isaiah</span> 28:27, 28.</p>
<p class="p2"><span class="smcap">The</span> art of husbandry was taught to man by God.
He would have starved while he was discovering it, and
so the Lord, when he sent him out of the Garden of
Eden, gave him a measure of elementary instruction in
agriculture, even as the prophet puts it—"His God
doth instruct him to discretion, and doth teach him."
God has taught man to plough, to break the clods, to
sow the different kinds of grain, and to thresh out the
different sorts of seeds.</p>
<p>The Eastern husbandman could not thresh by
machinery as we do; but still he was ingenious and
discreet in that operation. Sometimes a heavy instrument
was dragged over the corn to tear out the grain.
This is what is intended in the first clause by the "threshing
instrument," as also in that passage, "I have made
thee a sharp threshing instrument having teeth." When
the corn-drag was not used, they often turned the heavy
solid wheel of a country cart over the straw. This is
alluded to in the next sentence: "Neither is a cart
wheel turned about upon the cummin." They had also
flails not very unlike our own, and then for still smaller<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[276]</SPAN></span>
seeds, such as dill and cummin, they used a simple staff,
or a slender switch. "The fitches are beaten out with
a staff, and the cummin with a rod."</p>
<p>This is not the time or place to give a dissertation
upon threshing. We find every information upon that
subject in proper books; but the meaning of the illustration
is this—that as God has taught husbandmen to
distinguish between different kinds of grain in the
threshing, so does he in his infinite wisdom deal discreetly
with different sorts of men. He does not try us
all alike, seeing we are differently constituted. He
does not pass us all through the same agony of conviction:
we are not all to the same extent threshed with
terrors. He does not give us all to endure the same
family or bodily affliction; one escapes with only being
beaten with a rod, while another feels, as it were, the
feet of horses in his heavy tribulations.</p>
<p>Our subject is just this. <i>Threshing</i>: all kinds of
seeds need it, <i>all sorts of men need it</i>. Secondly, <i>the
threshing is done with discretion</i>, and, thirdly, <i>the threshing
will not last forever</i>; for so the second verse of the text
says: "Bread corn is bruised; because he will not ever
be threshing it, nor break it with the wheel of his cart,
nor bruise it with his horseman."</p>
<p class="p2">I. First, then, <span class="smcap">we all need threshing</span>. Some have
a foolish conceit of themselves that they have no sin;
but they deceive themselves, and the truth is not in
them. The best of men are men at the best; and
being men, they are not perfect, but are still compassed
about with infirmity. What is the object of threshing
the grain? Is it not to separate it from the straw and
the chaff?</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[277]</SPAN></span></p>
<p><i>About the best of men there is still a measure of chaff.</i> All
is not grain that lies upon the threshing-floor. All is not
grain even in those golden sheaves which have been
brought into our garner so joyfully. Even the wheat is
joined to the straw, which was necessary to it at one
time. About the kernel of the wheat the husk is wrapped,
and this still clings to it even when it lies upon the
threshing-floor. About the holiest of men there is
something superfluous, something which must be removed.
We either sin by omission or by trespass.
Either in spirit, or motive, or lack of zeal, or want of
discretion, we are faulty. If we escape one error, we
usually glide into its opposite. If before an action we
are right, we err in the doing of it, or, if not, we become
proud after it is over. If sin be shut out at the front
door, it tries the back gate, or climbs in at the window,
or comes down the chimney. Those who cannot perceive
it in themselves are frequently blinded by its
smoke. They are so thoroughly in the water that they
do not know that it rains. So far as my own observation
goes I have found out no man whom the old divines
would have called perfectly perfect; the absolutely all-round
man is a being whom I expect to see in heaven,
but not in this poor fallen world. We all need such
cleansing and purging as the threshing-floor is intended
to work for us.</p>
<p>Now, <i>threshing is useful in loosening the connection
between the good corn and the husk</i>. Of course, if it would
slip out easily from its husk, the corn would only need
to be shaken. There would be no necessity for a staff or
a rod, much less for the feet of horses, or the wheel of
a cart to separate it. But there's the rub: our soul not
only lieth in the dust, but "cleaveth" to it. There is<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[278]</SPAN></span>
a fearful intimacy between fallen human nature and
the evil which is in the world; and this compact is not
soon broken. In our hearts we hate every false way,
and yet we sorrowfully confess, "When I would do
good, evil is present with me." Sometimes when our
spirit cries out most ardently after God, a holy will is
present with us, but how to perform that which is
good we find not. Flesh and blood have tendencies and
weaknesses which, if not sinful in themselves, yet tend in
that direction. Appetites need but slight excitement to
germinate into lusts. It is not easy for us to forget our
own kindred and our father's house even when the
king doth most greatly desire our beauty. Our alien
nature remembers Egypt and the flesh-pots while yet
the manna is in our mouths. We were all born in the
house of evil, and some of us were nursed upon the lap
of iniquity, so that our first companionships were among
the heirs of wrath. That which was bred in the bone
is hard to get out of the flesh. Threshing is used to
loosen our hold of earthly things and break us away
from evil. This needs a divine hand, and nothing but
the grace of God can make the threshing effectual.
Something is done by threshing when the soul ceases to
be bound up with its sin, and sin is no longer pleasurable
or satisfactory. Still, as the work of threshing is
never done till the corn is separated altogether from
the husk, so chastening and discipline have never accomplished
their design till God's people give up every
form of evil, and abhor all iniquity. When we shake
right out of the straw, and have nothing further to do
with sin, then the flail will lie quiet. It has taken a
good deal of threshing to bring some of us anywhere near
that mark, and I am afraid many more heavy blows will
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[279]</SPAN></span>
be struck before we shall reach the total separation.
From a certain sort of sins we are very easily separated
by the grace of God early in our spiritual life; but when
those are gone, another layer of evils comes into sight,
and the work has to be repeated. The complete removal
of our connection with sin is a work demanding the
divine skill and power of the Holy Ghost, and by him
only will it be accomplished.</p>
<p>Threshing becomes needful for the sake of our usefulness;
for the wheat must come out of the husk to be
of service. We can only honor God and bless men by
being holy, harmless, undefiled, and separate from
sinners. O corn of the Lord's threshing-floor, thou
must be beaten and bruised, or perish as a worthless
heap! Eminent usefulness usually necessitates eminent
affliction.</p>
<p>Unless thus severed from sin, we cannot be gathered
into the garner. God's pure wheat must not be defiled
by an admixture of chaff. There shall in nowise
enter into heaven anything that defileth, therefore every
sort of imperfection must come away from us by some
means or other ere we can enter into the state of eternal
blessedness and perfection. Yea, even here we cannot
have true fellowship with the Father unless we are
daily delivered from sin.</p>
<p>Peradventure some of us to-day are lying up on the
threshing-floor, suffering from the blows of chastisement.
What then? Why, let us rejoice therein; for
<i>this testifies to our value in the sight of God</i>. If the wheat
were to cry out and say, "The great drag has gone over
me, therefore the husbandman has no care for me," we
should instantly reply—The husbandman does not pass
the corn-drag over the darnel or the nettles; it is only
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[280]</SPAN></span>
over the precious wheat that he turns the wheel of his
cart, or the feet of his oxen. Because he esteems the
wheat, therefore he deals sternly with it and spares it
not. Judge not, O believer, that God hates you because
he afflicts you; but interpret truly and see that he
honors you by every stroke which he lays upon you.
Thus saith the Lord, "You only have I known of all
the nations of the earth, therefore I will punish you
for all your iniquities." Because a full atonement has
been made by the Lord Jesus for all his people's sins,
therefore he will not punish us as a judge; but because
we are his dear children, therefore he will chastise us
as a father. In love he corrects his own children that
he may perfect them in his own image, and make them
partakers of his holiness. Is it not written, "I will
bring them under the rod of the covenant"? Has he
not said, "I have refined thee, but not with silver, I
have chosen thee in the furnace of affliction"? Therefore
do not judge according to the sight of the eyes or
the feeling of the flesh, but judge according to faith, and
understand that, as threshing is a testimony to the value
of the wheat, so affliction is a token of God's delight in
his people.</p>
<p>Remember, however, that as threshing is a sign of
the impurity of the wheat, so is <i>affliction an indication of
the present imperfection of the Christian</i>. If you were no
more connected with evil, you would be no more corrected
with sorrow. The sound of a flail is never heard
in heaven, for it is not the threshing-floor of the imperfect
but the garner of the completely sanctified.
The threshing instrument is therefore a humbling token,
and so long as we feel it we should humble ourselves
under the hand of God, for it is clear that we are not<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[281]</SPAN></span>
yet free from the straw and the chaff of fallen
nature.</p>
<p>On the other hand, the instrument is <i>a prophecy of
our future perfection</i>. We are undergoing from the hand
of God a discipline which will not fail: we shall by his
prudence and wisdom be clean delivered from the
husk of sin. We are feeling the blows of the staff, but
we are being effectually separated from the evil which
has so long surrounded us, and for certain we shall one
day be pure and perfect. Every tendency to sin shall
be beaten off. "Foolishness is bound in the heart
of a child; but the rod of correction shall drive it
far from him." If, we being evil, yet succeed with
our children by our poor, imperfect chastening, how
much more shall the Father of spirits cause us to live
unto himself by his holy discipline? If the corn could
know the necessary uses of the flail, it would invite the
thresher to his work; and since we know whereunto
tribulation tendeth, let us glory in it, and yield ourselves
with cheerfulness to its processes. We need threshing,
the threshing proves our value in God's sight, and while
it marks our imperfection, it secures our ultimate
cleansing.</p>
<p class="p2">II. Secondly, I would remark that <span class="smcap">God's threshing
is done with great discretion</span>; "for the fitches are
not threshed with a threshing instrument." The poor little
fitches, a kind of small seed used for flavoring cakes,
were not crushed out with a heavy drag, for by such
rough usage they would have been broken up and spoiled.
"Neither is a cart wheel turned about upon the
cummin;" this little seed, perhaps the carraway, would
have been ground by so great a weight; it would have<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[282]</SPAN></span>
been preposterous to treat it in that rough manner.
The fitches were soon removed from the stalks by being
"beaten out with a staff," and the cummin needed
nothing but a touch of a rod. For tender seeds the
farmer uses gentle means, and for the hardier grains he
reserves the sterner processes. Let us think of this,
as it conveys a valuable spiritual lesson.</p>
<p>Reflect, my brother, that your threshing and mine
<i>are in God's hands</i>. Our chastening is not left to servants,
much less to enemies; "we are chastened of the
Lord!" The Great Husbandman himself personally
bids the laborers do this and that, for they know not the
time or the way except as divine wisdom shall direct;
they would turn the wheel upon the cummin, or
attempt to thresh wheat with a staff. I have seen God's
servants trying both these follies; they have crushed
the weak and tender, and they have dealt with partiality
and softness with those who needed to be sternly rebuked.
How roughly some ministers, some elders,
some good men and women will go to work with timid,
tender souls; yet we need not fear that they will destroy
the true-hearted, for, however much they may vex
them the Lord will not leave his chosen in their hands,
but will overrule their mistaken severity, and preserve
his own from being destroyed thereby. How glad I am
of this; for there are many nowadays who would grind
the tender ones to powder if they could!</p>
<p>As the Lord has not left us in the power of man, so
also he has not left us in the power of the devil. Satan
may sift us as wheat, but he shall not thresh us as
fitches. He may blow away the chaff from us even
with his foul breath, but he shall not have the management
of the Lord's corn: "the Lord preserveth the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[283]</SPAN></span>
righteous." Not a stroke in providence is left to
chance; the Lord ordains it, and arranges the time, the
force, and the place of it. The divine decree leaves
nothing uncertain; the jurisdiction of supreme love
occupies itself with the smallest events of our daily
lives. Whether we bear the teeth of the corn-drag or
men do ride over our heads, or we endure the gentler
touches of the divine hand, everything is by appointment,
and the appointment is fixed by infallible wisdom.
Let this be a mine of comfort to the afflicted.</p>
<p>Next, remark that <i>the instruments used for our threshing
are chosen also by the Great Husbandman</i>. The Eastern
farmer, according to the text, has several instruments,
and so has our God. No form of threshing is pleasant
to the seed which bears it; indeed, each one seems to
the sufferer to be peculiarly objectionable. We say,
"I think I could bear anything but this sad trouble."
We cry, "It was not an enemy, then I could have
borne it," and so on. Perhaps the tender cummin foolishly
fancies that the horse-hoofs would be a less terrible
ordeal than the rod, and the fitches might even prefer
the wheel to the staff; but happily the matter is left
to the choice of One who judges unerringly. What
dost thou know about it, poor sufferer? How canst thou
judge of what is good for thee? "Ah!" cries a mother,
"I would not mind poverty; but to lose my darling
child is too terrible!" Another laments, "I could have
parted with all my wealth, but to be slandered cuts me
to the quick." There is no pleasing us in the matter
of chastisement. When I was at school, with my
uncle for master, it often happened that he would send
me out to find a cane for him. It was not a very pleasant
task, and I noticed that I never once succeeded in<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[284]</SPAN></span>
selecting a stick which was liked by the boy who had to
feel it. Either it was too thin, or too stout; and in
consequence I was threatened by the sufferers with
condign punishment if I did not do better next time. I
learned from that experience never to expect God's
children to like the particular rod with which they are
chastened. You smile at my simile, but you may smile
at yourself when you find yourself crying, "Any trouble
but this, Lord. Any affliction but this." How idle it
is to expect a pleasant trial; for it would then be no
trial at all. Almost every really useful medicine is unpleasant:
almost all effectual surgery is painful! no
trial for the present seemeth to be joyous, but grievous,
yet it is the right trial, and none the less right because
it is bitter.</p>
<p>Notice, too, that God not only selects the instruments,
<i>but he chooses the place</i>. Farmers in the East
have large threshing-floors upon which they throw the
sheaves of corn or barley, and upon these they turn
horses and drags; but near the house door I have often
noticed in Italy a much smaller circle of hardened clay or
cement, and here I have seen the peasants beating out
their garden seeds in a more careful manner than would
naturally be used toward the greater heaps upon the
larger area. Some saints are not afflicted in the common
affairs of life, but they have peculiar sorrow in
their innermost spirits; they are beaten on the smaller
and more private threshing-floor; but the process is
none the less effectual. How foolish are we when we
rebel against our Lord's appointment, and speak as
if we had a right to choose our own afflictions!
"Should it be according to thy mind?" Should
a child select the rod? Should the grain appoint its
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[285]</SPAN></span>
own thresher? Are not these things to be left to a
higher wisdom? Some complain of the time of their
trial; it is hard to be crippled in youth, or to be poor
in age, or to be widowed when your children are young.
Yet in all this there is wisdom. A part of the skill of
the physician may lie, not only in writing a prescription,
but in arranging the hours at which the medicine shall
be taken. One draught may be most useful in the morning,
and another may be more beneficial in the evening;
and so the Lord knows when it is best for us to drink
of the cup which he has prepared for us. I know a
dear child of God who is enduring a severe trial in his
old age, and I would fain screen him from it because
of his feebleness, but our heavenly Father knows best,
and there we must leave it. The instrument of the
threshing, the place, the measure, the time, the end,
are all appointed by infallible love.</p>
<p>It is interesting to notice in the text the limit of
this threshing. The husbandman is zealous to beat out
the seed, but he is careful not to break it in pieces by
too severe a process. His wheel is not to grind, but to
thresh; the horses' feet are not to break, but to separate.
He intends to get the cummin out of its husk, but
he will not turn a heavy drag upon it utterly to smash
it up and destroy it. In the same way the Lord has a
measure in all his chastening. Courage, tried friend,
you shall be afflicted as you need, but not as you deserve;
tribulation shall come as you are able to bear it.
As is the strength such shall the affliction be; the
wheat may feel the wheel, but the fitches shall bear
nothing heavier than a staff. No saint shall be tempted
beyond the proper measure, and the limit is fixed by
a tenderness which never deals a needless stroke.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[286]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>It is very easy to talk like this in cool blood, and
quite another thing to remember it when the flail is
hammering you; yet have I personally realized this
truth upon the bed of pain, and in the furnace of
mental distress. I thank God at every remembrance
of my afflictions; I did not doubt his wisdom then, nor
have I had any reason to question it since. Our Great
Husbandman understands how to divide us from the
husk, and he goes about his work in a way for which he
deserves to be adored for ever.</p>
<p>It is a pleasant thought that God's limit is one beyond
which trials never go—</p>
<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
<div class="stanza">
<div class="line small">"If trials six be fix'd for men</div>
<div class="line small i2">They shall not suffer seven.</div>
<div class="line small ip5">If God appoint afflictions ten</div>
<div class="line small i2">They ne'er can be eleven."</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p>The old law ordained forty stripes save one, and in
all our scourgings there always comes in that "save
one." When the Lord multiplies our sorrows up to a
hundred, it is because ninety-and-nine failed to effect
his purpose; but all the powers of earth and hell cannot
give us one blow above the settled number. We
shall never endure a superfluity of threshing. The
Lord never sports with the feelings of his saints. "He
does not afflict willingly," and so we may be sure he
never gives an unnecessary blow.</p>
<p>The wisdom of the husbandman in limiting his
threshing is far exceeded in the wisdom of God by which
he sets a limit to our griefs. Some escape with little
trouble, and perhaps it is because they are frail and
sensitive. The little garden seeds must not be beaten
too heavily lest they be injured; those saints who bear<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[287]</SPAN></span>
about with them a delicate body must not be roughly
handled, nor shall they be. Possibly they have a feeble
mind also, and that which others would laugh at would
be death to them; they shall be kept as the apple of
the eye.</p>
<p>If you are free from tribulation never ask for it;
that would be a great folly. I did meet with a brother
a little while ago who said that he was much perplexed
because he had no trouble. I said, "Do not worry
about <i>that</i>; but be happy while you may." Only a
queer child would beg to be flogged. Certain sweet
and shining saints are of such a gentle spirit that the
Lord does not expose them to the same treatment as he
metes out to others; they do not need it, and they
could not bear it; why should they wish for it?</p>
<p>Others, again, are very heavily pressed; but what
of that if they are a superior grain, a seed of larger usefulness,
intended for higher purposes? Let not such regret
that they have to endure a heavier threshing since
their use is greater. It is the bread corn that must go
under the feet of the horseman and must feel the wheel
of the cart; and so the most useful have to pass
through the sternest processes. There is not one
among us but what would say, "I could wish that I
were Martin Luther, or that I could play as noble a part
as he did." Yes; but in addition to the outward perils
of his life, the inward experiences of that remarkable
man were such as none of us would wish to feel. He
was frequently tormented with Satanic temptations, and
driven to the verge of despair. At one hour he rode
the whirlwind and the storm, master of all the world,
and then after days of fighting with the pope and the
devil he would go home to his bed and lie there broken
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_288" id="Page_288">[288]</SPAN></span>-down
and trembling. You see God's heroes only in
the pulpit, or in other public places, you know not what
they are before God in secret. You do not know their
inner life; else you might discover that the bread corn
is bruised, and that those who are most useful in comforting
others have to endure frequent sorrow themselves.
Envy no man; for you do not know how he
may have to be threshed to make him right and keep
him so.</p>
<p>Brethren, we see that our God uses discretion in
the chastisement of his people; let us use a loving
prudence when we have to deal with others in that way.
Be gentle as well as firm with your children; and if
you have to rebuke your brother do it very tenderly.
Do not drive your horses over the tender seed. Recollect
that the cummin is beaten out with a staff and not
crushed out with a wheel. Take a very light rod.
Perhaps it would be as well if you had no rod at all,
but left that work to wiser hands. Go you and sow and
leave your elders to thresh.</p>
<p>Next let us firmly believe in God's discretion, and
be sure that he is doing the right thing by us. Let us
not be anxious to be screened from affliction. When
we ask that the cup may pass from us let it be with a
"nevertheless not as I will." Best of all, let us freely
part with our chaff. The likeliest way to escape the
flail is to separate from the husk as quickly as possible.
"Come ye out from among them." Separate yourselves
from sin and sinners, from the world and worldliness,
and the process of threshing will all the sooner
be completed. God make us wise in this matter!</p>
<p class="p2">III. A word or two is all we can afford upon the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_289" id="Page_289">[289]</SPAN></span>
third head, which is that <span class="smcap">the threshing will not last
forever</span>.</p>
<p>The threshing will not last all our days even here:
"Bread corn is bruised, but he will not always be
threshing it." Oh, no. "For a small moment have I
forsaken thee, but with great mercies will I gather
thee." "He will not always chide, neither will he keep
his anger for ever." "Weeping may endure for a
night, but joy cometh in the morning." Rejoice, ye
daughters of sorrow! Be comforted, ye sons of grief!
Have hope in God, for you shall yet praise him who is
the health of your countenance. The rain does not
always fall, nor will the clouds always return. Sorrow
and sighing shall flee away. Threshing is not an operation
which the corn requires all the year round; for the
most part the flail is idle. Bless the Lord, O my soul!
The Lord will yet bring home his banished ones.</p>
<p>Above all, tribulation will not last forever, for we
shall soon be gone to another and better world. We
shall soon be carried to the land where there are neither
threshing-floors nor corn-drags. I sometimes think I
hear the herald calling me. His trumpet sounds: "Up
and away! Boot and saddle! Up and away! Leave
the camp and the battle, and return in triumph." The
night is far spent with you, but the morning cometh.
The daylight breaks above yon hills. The day is coming—the
day that shall go no more down forever.
Come, eat your bread with joy, and march onward with
a merry heart; for the land which floweth with milk
and honey is but a little way before you. Until the day
break and the shadows flee away, abide the Great
Husbandman's will, and may the Lord glorify himself
in you. Amen.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />