HARVEST

Not so many years ago, a shopping trip to the greengrocers would
reveal a small assortment of locally grown produce - various root
and leaf vegetables, a selection of apples, pears, bananas, oranges
and possibly some plums, the odd melon, pineapple or coconut.
The vegetables tended to be those which you could grow in the
garden, greenhouse or allotment - though perhaps delivered a few
weeks earlier than you could expect from home-grown produce.
Everything had its season, and one could look forward with eager
anticipation to the first strawberries of summer, or the arrival
of the cauliflower, cucumber or tomatoes. This seasonality in
the food that we ate meant that each season held its own delights
for the lover of fresh food.
But dont things change?
Now Im not necessarily saying that this is a bad thing,
and that we should go back to the good old days. For
one thing its opened up some new markets for smaller countries
to export the crops that they can grow and we cant - even
if at times the West has exploited these smaller producers. But
it does mean for children growing up today the whole concept of
a Harvest Festival really doesnt mean as much as perhaps
it did to my grandparents. Silage gathered into round bales wrapped
with polythene doesnt have the same mystique as the sight
of a combine harvester and fields of gently waving golden corn.
And by the time the churches get around to celebrating harvest,
most of the crops have already been safely gathered in for some
time.
Not so of course in some countries. Weve all seen those
horrific television pictures of the problems some African countries
have had with a total lack of rain. In some cases the seed hasnt
even managed to germinate, let alone get anywhere near ripening.
What celebrations there must be in such countries when conditions
are favorable and sufficient crop is harvested to ensure that
the family will not go hungry through the winter months. For in
countries such as these, there is little chance of a shortfall
being made up for by imported produce - other than and charitable
aid which might come after the peoples plight has reached
the eyes and ears of the worlds media.
So if there is no really defined time in late September when
we can breath a long sigh and say that the harvest is safely gathered
in, why do we still continue to have Harvest Festivals? It seems
a question worth asking - I mean, is it simply tradition - a throwback
to the Victorian lifestyle with echoes of Constables Haywain?
Is it a chance to fill a few pews at a point in time between Easter
and Christmas? If we no longer rely on a satisfactory harvest
in this country to supply our needs in the way that our forefathers
did in the past, then why all the fuss?
It doesnt even help us much if we look back at the history
of the festival, Im afraid. After all, throughout the ages
people have given thanks for the maturing of crops that would
sustain them through the following months. And of course like
many other ancient customs, harvest rituals - such as the offering
of the first fruits to the gods - were taken over by the early
church in an attempt to water down the influence of the traditional
pagan beliefs. By the Middle Ages the first corn from the harvest
was made into the Eucharest bread on August 1st, Lammas day. When
the harvest had been gathered, Harvest Home would
be celebrated in a farmers house.
It was customary to use the last sheaf of grain to make a corn
dolly, based on the belief that the corn spirit was contained
within the dolly. When the feasting was over it was taken to the
farmhouse and kept there until the next harvest supper.
Nowadays, harvest is usually observed late September or early
October - a tradition that I was surprised to learn only goes
back as far as the middle of the last century and curtesy of a
Cornish vicar. And sad to say, the corn dolly is still in evidence
in the decorations of some churches - a rather unwelcome remembrance
of harvests pagan past.
This is all a bit depressing isnt it. The closer we look
at the harvest that has been handed down by the established church
from its pagan past, the less it seems to have relevance to our
modern world. To understand the real significance of this festival,
it seems we have to go back much further - back to the real roots
of our Christian faith within the Old Testament and among the
Jewish people, and their relationship with their God.
From very early times the Jewish year was punctuated by festivals
- the Feasts of the Lord. Some were timed to coincide
with the changing seasons, reminding the people of Gods
constant provision for them and also allowing them to return by
way of offering, a token of all that hed given them. Others
celebrated some of the great events of Israels history,
and the ways that God had intervened to help his people when they
were in need.
All were occasions of joy and celebration reflecting on all the
good things that God had given to and done for his people, as
well as times where the people could come close to their God and
ask for forgiveness and cleansing.
We know that they were never intended to be observed out of mere
formality and empty ritual. The prophets warned the people against
reducing these festivals to that level. The real purpose was spiritual
- a great and glorious meeting together of God and His people.
Among the various festivals that the Jews celebrated are two
which seem relevant to this Sunday. The first was the Feast of
Weeks, which we read about in Leviticus 23. Celebrated fifty days
after the beginning of Passover, it was essentially an agricultural
celebration at which the first fruits of the harvest were offered
to God. The priest offered two loaves of bread made from the new
flour, along with animal sacrifices. The festival later became
known as Pentecost - from the Greek word meaning fiftieth.
Doesnt life get confusing? Now it seems as though we ought
to be having our Harvest Festival on Whit Sunday. The second festival
which I want us to think about is that of the Feast of Ingathering
(or Tabernacles), which is an autumn festival held at the end
of the fruit harvest. This was the most popular and joyful of
all the festivals and lasted a full seven days. Celebrations included
camping out in gardens and on roof-tops, in tents or huts made
from the branches of trees. These tents (or booths or tabernacles)
were a reminder of the time that the people lived in tents after
the Lord brought them out of Egypt and led them toward the promised
land.
The festival included a ceremony in which water was poured out
and prayers made for good rains for the coming season. Its
also suggested that it was during such a ceremony that Jesus stood
up and declared "Whosoever is thirsty should come to me and
drink. As the scripture says, Whoever believes in me, streams
of life-giving water will pour out from his heart. (John 7:37-38)
Can I suggest that its somewhere between these two Jewish
festivals, The Feast of Weeks and the Feast of Tabernacles that
we can look for the real significance of our Harvest Festival
today. In a time when it is difficult to relate to the Victorian
print depicting harvests of old, and Constables Haywain
is only a fading copy on the wall, and so many inner-city children
wouldnt recognise peas or broad beans if they saw them growing
in a field, maybe we should be looking for a deeper spiritual
meaning.
In this way the offering we bring, the fruit and vegetables,
the beautiful flowers and foliage which decorate our chapels today
can still remind us of all the good things that the Lord has given
to us, and for which we can too easily become complacent. And
while were saying thanks for the food we eat, what about
the gas and electricity that is used to cook the food, the petrol
that gets us to the supermarket, the homes within which we eat
- there are so many things in our lives that we should be grateful
for.
But Jesus words in Johns gospel remind us that our
needs are not just met by a constant supply of brocoli and sweetcorn.
Jesus had a way of taking the ordinary things of life and bringing
out of them a tremendous truth. On the occasion referred to in
our reading water from Siloams pool was solemnly offered in the
temple - possibly as Ive mentioned a rite invoking Gods
help in bringing the refreshing rain to end the long summer drought.
Jesus seizes the opportunity in the way that only he could - any
thirsty soul was invited to find deep and lasting refreshment
through faith in him. The blessing which Jesus offered was to
be made available through the Holy Spirit - which had not yet
been given in a new way to believers.
The Spirit had been active in the world from the beginning of
time, but was not given to the believers in the full Christian
sense until Pentecost, after Jesus had died, risen and ascended
to His Father in heaven. And there of course is another link to
the first of our festivals - which was the celebration of the
first fruits but held when we now celebrate Pentecost.
Im drawn to the conclusion that the overriding need of
Christians in todays world is to be constantly reminded
of all the good things - both spiritually and materially - that
our God offers to his people, in the same way that the people
of Israel used those two festivals to thank Him not only for the
provision of a sufficient harvest, but also for the fact that
their God was constantly acting in their best interests - that
His love for His people could look beyond all the bad things that
they did, all the times that they strayed from following him sincerely,
and still provide for their needs.
For that reason I have included among the usual gifts on the
table, a glass of water - to remind us of the spiritual food without
which we could not function as effective Christians. For it was
the gift of the living water, the Holy Spirit, to the believers
in Acts that was the starting point, the birth, of the church,
and without which we wouldnt be sitting here and singing
hymns of thanks to God for his love for us.
So it is that two of our festivals, Pentecost and Harvest are
seemingly linked by purpose and aim, and enable us now to thank
God for all his good gifts - for food to eat, for our material
needs, for the meeting of our spiritual needs. And with so much
to give thanks for, our Harvest Thanksgiving should never be a
mere formality or ritual - it will be as the prophets intended,
a great and glorious meeting between God and His people.