Who sends the rain?
“Neither say they in their heart, Let us now fear the
Lord our God, that giveth rain, both the former and the latter, in his season:
he reserveth unto us the appointed weeks of the harvest.” –Jeremiah 5:24
The
timing of rain can determines whether it is a blessing or a curse. Especially when you’re talking in
agricultural terms; concerning rain, timing is everything. You can have a lot of rain at planting, then
none throughout growing, and you will have a lousy crop. You can have none at planting, and then a lot
at harvest; and you will not be able to get to your crop. The blessing of rain walks hand in hand with
the timing of it; and we must remember that God controls both the rain and when
it falls.
Agriculture
analogies, allegories, and references are used all throughout the Bible. People in that day and time could really
relate to what was being said.
Furthermore, seeing is how people will always need to eat; the folks in
our day can relate as well. It is both
relevant and timeless. In the above
text, Jeremiah speaks to a people who have a “revolting and rebellious
heart.” They do not fear God, that is to
say, they do not respect or reverence him.
They do not recognize that God gives the rain, and reserves the
harvest. In other words, all that they
have, they have because of God. The
arrogance of refusing to recognize this is astounding, and not surprising,
relevant in today’s time. Imagine if you
will, a place where there is no grocery store, no Wal-Mart, no fast food
chains; a place where the food you eat is solely provided by the land you own. This is the reality that the people in
Jeremiah’s day lived in (and truthfully it is the reality we live in as well;
we are just further removed from the farming aspect of it all). They had to totally depend on the rain, and
on the timing of the rain. In order to
receive life and substance, they were completely relaying on something that was
far beyond their control. In planting,
you want a former rain, a rain that comes in swiftly after you plant. This supercharges your crop and gives you
strong germination. Right before
harvest, you want a latter rain. A rain
that drenches your crop and gives it that last drink to boost it up some more
before you have to bring it in.
Obviously, you need rain in between, but the former and the latter rain
at the perfect time gives you an abundant harvest. Who on earth can command the rain? What can we do to stop the rain from
falling? The nutrients and abundance of
a field is reserved by God for man, and given by His hand. These people in Jeremiah’s day are reaping
the fruits of bounty on the back of the Almighty, and they have no humility or
thankfulness in their heart. There is
only open rebellion and a false belief that they are the giver of life. Do you see yourself in this text? Our lives are our field, and in it we work
and labor. We sow what little seeds of
time we have and earnestly expect a return on our investment. We hope for a harvest, and rejoice when there
is one; but to whom is the glory given?
What do we gain that God did not first provide? “Ye are
not your own but bought with a price.”
One of the greatest tragedies that ever befell this country is the
acceptance of evolution and anti-creationism.
Under the cloak of this theory the devil crept in and sowed a seed of
doubt that would undermine Christianity entirely; and that seed is this. God is not the creator. When the people accept that there is no
creator, then they believe that there is no governor of the rain; and if we
believe that, then we accept that we are lords over our lives and thereby covet
a glory that is not ours.
If
God chooses to send the former and latter rain, than we must praise Him for
it. If he chooses to withhold the rain,
that is in His providence and we must bless His name. God knows when to send the rain and he knows
when the blessing is needed. The
righteous trust God and praise God in the dry season and the rainy season. The wicked trust themselves in all seasons,
and “neither say they in their hearts let
us now fear God”. When we refuse to
accept a God that sends the rain, then we break the first commandment; and
though we have all the goods this world can offer, we will want in the Day of
Judgment. “Fear ye the Lord all ye his
saints, for there is no want to them that fear him.”