APRIL 30, 2024
“For they have sown the wind, and they shall reap the whirlwind: it hath no stalk: the bud shall yield no meal: if so be it yield, the strangers shall swallow it up.” (Hosea 8:7)
Life is seedtime for all of us. All are sowing, and those who are wise will ask, “What will the harvest be?” The hope of a good harvest is joyful encouragement for those who sow righteousness. “Say ye to the righteous, that it shall be well with him: for they shall eat of the fruit of their doings.” (Isa. 3:10) The certainty of harvest should be a solemn warning to the godless, “…for whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he also reap.” (Gal. 6:7) Here we see what evil seed will produce.
The result of certain sowing will be terrible. “They have sown the wind, and they shall reap the whirlwind.” When the sowing is careless and mischievous the harvest will be the same, only worse. Sowing the wind is not the same thing as sowing to the wind. Sowing the wind is the height of vanity and foolishness, and the returns will be intensified – they will have grown into the whirlwind.
Foolish men sow their wild oats, and we need not wonder what the harvest will be. We have many debauched, drunken, profligates all around us, bearing in their very persons the first fruits of the fearful harvest of such sowing. They are vessels of destruction fitting themselves for destruction. Just as the righteous find virtue to be its own reward, it is but the first fruits of the grand harvest to come.
Immoral theories, evil and poisonous as they be, are but empty vain speculations. However, when they become more than theories, and are put into practice, the result is a vicious whirlwind of societal destruction. The speculation was an airy nothing, but the outcome is the breaking down of all that is built up. The same is true within the church. When slight deviations from the truth are introduced, they may seem trivial and harmless. However, what may appear to be insignificant errors can grow into grievous heresies. The whirlwind that is sure to follow could be devastating spiritually, even to the point of denying the only Lord God, and our Lord Jesus Christ. (Jude 4)
Tolerance of sin in yourself may seem no big deal, a little sowing the wind, but the very nature of sin makes even the least deviation a big deal. The old tempter is the father of lies, and the suggestion that “little sins” can stay little, and that there’s no harm in trying something just one time, are among his most dangerous deceptions. Occasional indulgences become habit, and habit is the vehement east wind before which life expires, and hope is swept away. What one might think to be allowable acts may grow into dangerous excesses.
Also, tolerance of sin in the family is a fruitful source of evil. Old Eli had no idea what horrific evils would come of his laxness with his two sons, Hophni and Phinehas. What a whirlwind of destruction would ensue, bringing disgrace to himself, his nation, and his God. Let no man think that he can measure, much less limit, the consequences of sin as to himself, his family, his church, or the world. When once the winds are up, who can still them?
The result of some sowing is manifest failure. “It hath no stalk.” The seed feebly tries to grow, but it comes to nothing. Self-conceit vainly tries to produce a reputation; it strives unsuccessfully to obtain salvation. “It hath no stalk.” Self-righteousness is sowing wind. If there is no attachment to the True Vine, it is an unattached branch that withers and is fit for nothing but the burning.
The result of many sowings is unsatisfactory. “The bud shall yield no meal.” The result of many sowings is personal disappointment. “If so be it yield, the strangers shall swallow it up.”
Nothing is wise or worth the doing except what is done unto the Lord. Only to live for God is wise sowing. May the Lord utterly destroy all our sowing to the flesh lest we reap corruption. (Gal. 6:8) May the Lord Jesus supply us with good seed, and bless us in the sowing of it, so that we might reap a good harvest.
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