A Great Harvest

“But in fact, Christ has been raised from the dead. He is the first of a great harvest of all who have died.”
1 Corinthians 15:20 NLT

I don’t think there is anyone who doesn’t understand what a harvest is. Even we city dwellers occasionally travel outside our confines and venture into a strange place without houses and the other signs of urban life. Great swathes of concrete and tarmac blight our city neighbourhoods. Neon signs and street lamps provide illumination. Motor vehicles abound, transporting people around, creating an impression of busyness and movement. Supermarkets peddle well-packaged fresh food that, in many cases, has been altered or displayed in ways that hide its origins. For those picking up a net of oranges, would they know how it was grown? Or would a shopper who placed a sliced loaf, packaged in plastic film, in their trolley, understand what was in it, and where it came from? But taking a journey outside our urban limits will expose fields covered with all sorts of crops. Cereals such as wheat, barley or oats. Greenery such as cabbage or broccoli. In other countries, vines burdened with clusters of grapes or trees covered with oranges or apples can be found. And in it all, we look on, wondering how such products of God’s glorious provision ever get to our mouths. But we mustn’t forget the source of essential proteins originating in the animals we eat. Beef, pork and chicken products are commonly found on our supermarket shelves or in our butchers’ shops, but these animals can be found not far from our city limits. I remember some years ago a foster boy aged about four, who we had just collected from a social work office in Glasgow.  The poor lad was confused enough with the journey to his new home, but in the rolling fields in the West of Fife, he spotted a herd of cows and asked what they were—such a shame for a neglected child deprived of the basics of a life we take for granted. 

“[Christ] is the first of a great harvest

Paul wrote that Christ was the “first of a great harvest of all who have died”, because He was resurrected from the dead after a short time spent in a tomb. Usually, such graves are permanent places of residence for a human body, but not so for Jesus. He just needed to borrow it for a while. He spectacularly vacated that tomb, as recorded in the Gospels. The practical details we read are authentic and detailed. In his Gospel, Mark records that some prominent women purchased spices to anoint Jesus’ body, but as they journeyed to the tomb, they were worried about how they could roll the stone away from the entrance. Imagine their surprise when they found that it had already been moved away, and “When they entered the tomb, they saw a young man clothed in a white robe sitting on the right side. The women were shocked” (Mark 16:5). This young man (who must have been an angel) then said “ … Don’t be alarmed. You are looking for Jesus of Nazareth, who was crucified. He isn’t here! He is risen from the dead! Look, this is where they laid his body”. Reading on, we find that the women fled the tomb, scared witless. In Matthew’s account, we read about a great earthquake, an angel rolling aside the stone, and then sitting on it. The Roman soldiers fainted with fear and were bribed to tell lies about what had happened. All wonderful details of that day when Jesus was raised from the dead, the “first of a great harvest of all who have died”. The detail of an angel rolling away a heavy stone and then sitting on it never fails to amuse me.

Predicting His death and resurrection, Jesus said, “I tell you the truth, unless a kernel of wheat is planted in the soil and dies, it remains alone. But its death will produce many new kernels—a plentiful harvest of new lives” (John 12:24). Jesus died on that Calvary cross, taking on Himself the sins of mankind, past, present and future, but without the resurrection His death would have been pointless. Jesus died so that we would be forgiven, but He was raised to life, demonstrating that all who believe in Him would also be resurrected, just as He was. Eternal life awaits those who faithfully follow Jesus day by day in this life here on Planet Earth. 

Father God. We will never really get our minds around the perfection of Your plan for the salvation of mankind. We thank You for Jesus, the first of the resurrected ones, and we look forward to the day when we will join with Him in our Heavenly home. Thank You. Amen.  

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