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Summer Gathering for Winter's Need
Words for Life's Sunny Days
From Timeless Grace Gems
J.R. Miller, 1901
Words for Life's Sunny Days
From Timeless Grace Gems
J.R. Miller, 1901
"He who gathers crops in summer is a wise son, but he who sleeps during harvest is a disgraceful son!" Proverbs 10:5
We ought to begin in early youth to gather beautiful things into our life — gentle thoughts, noble truths, pure memories, inspiring influences, enriching friendships. Then we shall have a treasure-house from which to draw in the days when work is hard, when sorrow comes, when the resources of gladness fail.
Life's providential adjustments are perfect. For every need, there is a supply. Those who do each day's duty in its day, shall not lack in any future. When there is a lack for which there is no provision ready, there has been a thread of duty dropped somewhere in the past. An opportunity has been allowed to pass unimproved, and now perhaps long afterward — a need emerges and there is nothing with which to meet it. If we are always diligent and faithful, we shall always find ready to our hand what we need in any new experience.
So we carry in our present the provision for our future. There is a Bible proverb which says, "He who gathers crops in summer is a wise son." In its simplest form, this saying refers to the gathering and laying up of food in the summer days. There is a season when the harvest is waving on the fields, when fruits hang on the trees and vines, when earth's good things wait to be gathered. That is the time when men must be diligent, if they would lay up in store for their winter's needs. Not long does the opportunity wait. No sooner are the fruits ripe, than they begin to decay and fall off.
No sooner is the harvest golden, than it begins to perish. Winter follows summer. Then there are no fruits on the trees and vines, no harvest waving on the fields. The hungry man cannot then go out and find food, and if he has not gathered in summer, and laid up in store, he must suffer lack.
The other part of the proverb teaches: "He who sleeps during harvest is a disgraceful son!" We have all seen that kind of son. A great deal of the world's poverty is caused by laziness — the failure to gather in summer. A man idles away the days when he ought to have been diligent — and then finds himself in need in the days when even diligence would not avail, and when he may as well sleep on and take his ease. If we accept life's opportunities and make reasonable use of them, we shall not likely lack even in the time of famine.
The Bible is a wonderfully wise book. It is full of counsels which touch every point of life. It abounds in exhortations to diligence. It has no sympathy with idleness or indolence. The Book of Proverbs is specially full of the gospel of work. "He becomes poor, who deals with a slack hand; but the hand of the diligent makes rich." "Go to the ant, you sluggard; consider its ways and be wise! It has no commander, no overseer or ruler, yet it stores its provisions in summer and gathers its food at harvest." So, everywhere, this lesson of timely diligence is pressed. "He who gathers in summer is a wise son." He does not lack in winter. When the bitter cold comes and he cannot work, when the fields and vines are bare and he cannot gather food — he has but to turn to the stores he has laid up, and there he finds all that he needs to feed his hunger.
Primarily the counsel is for the farmers, who gather their sustenance from fields and orchards, where only for a brief season do the harvests and fruits remain. He who does not sow in seed-time, will have nothing to reap in the time of ingathering.
But the principle has wide application. Life has its summers and its winters, its times of health, plenty, and opportunity — and then its times of sickness or want; and these seasons of need must feed from the stores laid up in the days of abundance.
There are times when men can have employment, with corresponding wages — and then they should save from their earnings and lay up in reserve for the times when they will have no work and consequently no wages. If they do this, they will never suffer lack. But if they eat up all their harvest in the time of plenty, they will go hungry when the fields are bare. Every life, every home, has experiences of special need. Sickness comes. The bread-winners must cease their toil. Then there are pinching times — if there has been no forethought, and if nothing has been saved and stored from the plenty of brighter days.
It is a wise rule to be adopted in youth and steadily adhered to through all life — never to spend quite all one's earnings or income, but always to lay by at least a little in store. If one's income is small, one's expenditures should be less. We should learn always to live within our means. If we fail to do this, debt is the inevitable result, and debt is a bondage which soon crushes out hope and paralyzes energy. The rainy day comes sometime in every life, and if there is no reserve spared and garnered from the sunny days of plenty, there can be no escape from debt. We must then borrow from some source, either from the stores of the past — or from the avails of the future. To turn to the latter resource, is to make life harder in the days to come until the debt is cancelled. Young people should learn this lesson. If it was thought important enough to be put into the Bible, among the words of eternal life — then it is important enough to put into a human book and to be heeded by everyone: "He who gathers crops in summer is a wise son, but he who sleeps during harvest is a disgraceful son!"
The lesson falls under two heads. Everyone must gather in harvest. Everyone must work while it is day. The promise that we shall not lack, is conditioned upon faithful diligence in the time when we can be busy. When we pray for daily bread, it is our daily bread for which we are taught to ask, and no bread can be ours until we have earned it. The lazy and indolent man is preparing poverty for himself! He cannot have God's blessing, and he has no promise of divine care when the empty days — days of need, come upon him.
Then everyone should gather, that is, lay aside, in harvest, in the plentiful season, because it will not always be harvest-time. There will surely be a winter after the summer, and the winter must feed off the summer — or be in want. After the seven years of abundance, there will be other seven years with no ingathering. But he who stores away the surplus of his plenty, will not go hungry in the times of scarcity.
There are other harvest-times in life in which we must gather, or we shall be in want in the other winters that will also come.
YOUTH is a summer. It is a time . . .
for education,
for receiving instruction,
for gathering knowledge,
for the formation of habits,
for the knitting of the thews and sinews of character,
for the choosing of friends and the weaving of friendships.
In youth the days are long and quiet, and free from care, burden, and responsibility. Other hands toil then, other brains think and plan, other hearts love and suffer — that youth may be happy and unanxious. Later comes real life with its duties, its responsibilities, its cares and struggles, its sorrows, its burdens. But he who has gathered in the summer days of youth, shall not lack in the winter of adulthood. A youth-time diligently improved, prepares one for whatever severer days may bring.
We are not living in a world of chance; this is our Father's world. There is no doubt, therefore, that in the wise providence of God, there come to everyone in youth, opportunities which if properly improved — will prepare for noble, beautiful, and successful life in the mature days.
It is easy to see how this is true in good homes, where children are trained by faithful parents, in the midst of kindly and encouraging circumstances, under healthful and wholesome influences. Their youth-time is one long summer, with golden harvests on its hundred fields, with nothing to do but to reap and gather into life's barns.
But it is true likewise of those who grow up in poverty, amid hardship and in stern conditions. These have their opportunities as well. It is well known that many of the world's best and greatest men, have gathered on what seemed bare and rugged fields, the store of good and of strength which in later years gave them fruitful living. A true and wise use of the opportunities that are given in youth, whether they come in the sunshine of comfort and ease, or in circumstances of poverty and hardship — will fit one for whatever of task or struggle may fall to one's lot in the after days.
God has a plan for every life, and that plan takes in the life's training and preparation — as well as its work and service. There is always opportunity, too, for just the right preparation that is needed for the mission which is God's thought and plan for the life. But if we miss the preparation, then we shall fail in the work that we were meant to do. If we would be ready for the opportunities and responsibilities of tomorrow — then we must accept those of today.