<h2><SPAN name="FARM_LABORERS" id="FARM_LABORERS">FARM LABORERS.</SPAN></h2>
<p class="small">"I have planted, Apollos watered; but God gave the increase. So then
neither is he that planteth anything, neither he that watereth; but God that
giveth the increase. Now he that planteth and he that watereth are one: and
every man shall receive his own reward according to his own labor. For we are
laborers together with God: ye are God's husbandry."—<span class="smcap">1 Corinthians</span> 3:6-9.</p>
<p class="p2">I <span class="smcap">shall</span> begin at the end of my text, because I find
it to be the easiest way of mapping out my discourse.
We shall first remark that <i>the church is God's farm</i>: "Ye
are God's husbandry." In the margin of the revised
version we read, "Ye are God's tilled ground," and
that is the very expression for me. "Ye are God's
tilled ground," or farm. After we have spoken of the
farm we will next say a little upon the fact that <i>the
Lord employs laborers</i> on his estate: and when we have
looked at the laborers—such poor fellows as they are—we
will remember that <i>God himself is the great worker</i>:
"We are laborers together with God."</p>
<p class="p2">I. We begin by considering that <span class="smcap">the church is
God's farm</span>. The Lord has made the church his own
by his sovereign <i>choice</i>. He has also secured it unto
himself by <i>purchase</i>, having paid for it a price immense.
"The Lord's portion is his people; Jacob is the lot of
his inheritance." Every acre of God's farm cost the
Saviour a bloody sweat, yea, the blood of his heart.
He loved us, and gave himself for us: that is the price<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[150]</SPAN></span>
he paid. Henceforth the church is God's freehold, and
he holds the title deeds of it. It is our joy to feel that
we are not our own, we are bought with a price. The
church is God's farm by choice and purchase.</p>
<p>And now he has made it his by <i>enclosure</i>. It lay exposed
aforetime as part of an open common, bare and
barren, covered with thorns and thistles, and the haunt
of every wild beast; for we were "by nature the children
of wrath, even as others." Divine foreknowledge
surveyed the waste, and electing love marked out its
portion with a full line of grace, and thus set us apart
to be the Lord's own estate forever. In due time effectual
grace came forth with power, and separated us from
the rest of mankind, as fields are hedged and ditched to
part them from the open heath. Hath not the Lord declared
that he hath chosen his vineyard and fenced it?</p>
<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
<div class="stanza">
<div class="line small">"We are a garden wall'd around,</div>
<div class="line ip5 small">Chosen and made peculiar ground;</div>
<div class="line ip5 small">A little spot, enclosed by grace</div>
<div class="line ip5 small">Out of the world's wide wilderness."</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p>The Lord has also made this farm evidently his own
by <i>cultivation</i>. What more could he have done for his farm?
He has totally changed the nature of the soil: from
being barren he hath made it a fruitful land. He hath
ploughed it, and digged it, and fattened it, and watered
it, and planted it with all manner of flowers and fruits.
It hath already brought forth to him many a pleasant
cluster, and there are brighter times to come, when
angels shall shout the harvest home, and Christ "shall
see of the travail of his soul, and shall be satisfied."</p>
<p>This farm is preserved by the Lord's continual
<i>protection</i>. Not only did he enclose it, and cultivate it by
his miraculous power, to make it his own farm, but he<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[151]</SPAN></span>
continually maintains possession of it. "I the Lord do
keep it; I will water it every moment: lest any
hurt it, I will keep it night and day." If it were not
for God's continual power her hedges would soon be
thrown down, and wild beasts would devour her fields.
Wicked hands are always trying to break down her walls
and lay her waste again, so that there should be no true
church in the world; but the Lord is jealous for his land,
and will not allow it to be destroyed. A church would
not long remain a church if God did not preserve it unto
himself. What if God should say, "I will take away
the hedge thereof, and it shall be eaten up; and break
down the wall thereof, and it shall be trodden down"?
What a wilderness it would become. What saith he?
"Go ye now unto my place which was in Shiloh, where
I set my name at the first, and see what I did to it for
the wickedness of my people Israel." Go ye to Jerusalem,
where of old was the city of his glory and the shrine
of his indwelling, and what is left there to-day? Go ye
to Rome, where once Paul preached the gospel with
power: what is it now but the centre of idolatry? The
Lord may remove the candlestick, and leave a place
that was bright as day to become black as darkness
itself. Hence God's farm remains a farm because he is
ever in it to prevent its returning to its former wildness.
Omnipotent power is as needful to keep the fields
of the church under cultivation as to reclaim them at
the first.</p>
<p>Inasmuch as the church is God's own farm, <i>he expects
to receive a harvest from it</i>. The world is waste, and
he looks for nothing from it; but we are tilled land, and
therefore a harvest is due from us. Barrenness suits the
moorland, but to a farm it would be a great discredit.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[152]</SPAN></span>
Love looks for returns of love; grace given demands
gracious fruit. Watered with the drops of the Saviour's
bloody sweat, shall we not bring forth a hundredfold
to his praise? Kept by the eternal Spirit of God, shall
there not be produced in us fruits to his glory? The
Lord's husbandry upon us has shown a great expenditure
of cost, and labor, and thought; ought there
not to be a proportionate return? Ought not the
Lord to have a harvest of obedience, a harvest of
holiness, a harvest of usefulness, a harvest of praise?
Shall it not be so? I think some churches forget
that an increase is expected from every field of the
Lord's farm, for they never have a harvest or even look
for one. Farmers do not plough their lands or sow their
fields for amusement; they mean business, and plough
and sow because they desire a harvest. If this fact
could but enter into the heads of some professors, surely
they would look at things in a different light; but of
late it has seemed as if we thought that God's church
was not expected to produce anything, but existed for
her own comfort and personal benefit. Brethren, it
must not be so; the great Husbandman must have some
reward for his husbandry. Every field must yield its
increase, and the whole estate must bring forth to his
praise. We join with the bride in the Song in saying,
"My vineyard, which is mine, is before me: thou, O
Solomon, must have thousand, and those that keep the
fruit thereof two hundred."</p>
<p>But I come back to the place from which I started.
This farm is, by choice, by purchase, by enclosure, by
cultivation, by preservation, entirely the Lord's. See,
then, the injustice of allowing any of the laborers to
call even a part of the estate his own. When a great
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[153]</SPAN></span>
man has a large farm of his own, what would he think if
Hodge the ploughman should say, "Look here, I plough
this farm, and therefore it is mine: I shall call this field
Hodge's Acres"? "No," says Hobbs, "I reaped that
land last harvest, and therefore it is mine, and I shall
call it Hobbs's Field." What if all the other laborers
became Hodgeites and Hobbsites, and so parcelled out
the farm among them? I think the landlord would
soon eject the lot of them. The farm belongs to its
owner, and let it be called by his name; but it is absurd
to call it by the names of the men who labor upon
it. Shall insignificant nobodies rob God of his glory?
Remember how Paul put it: "Who then is Paul, and
who is Apollos?" "Is Christ divided? was Paul crucified
for you? or were ye baptized in the name of Paul?"
The entire church belongs to him who has chosen it in
his sovereignty, bought it with his blood, fenced it by
his grace, cultivated it by his wisdom, and preserved it
by his power. There is but one church on the face of the
earth, and those who love the Lord should keep this truth
in mind. Paul is a laborer, Apollos is a laborer, Cephas
is a laborer; but the farm is not Paul's, not so much as
a rood of it, nor does a single parcel of land belong to
Apollos, or the smallest allotment to Cephas; for "Ye
are Christ's." The fact is that in this case the laborers
belong to the land, and not the land to the laborers:
"For all things are yours; whether Paul, or Apollos,
or Cephas." "We preach not ourselves, but Christ
Jesus the Lord; and ourselves your servants for Jesus'
sake."</p>
<p class="p2">II. We have now to notice, as our second head, that
<span class="smcap">the great husbandman employs laborers</span>. <i>By human<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[154]</SPAN></span>
agency God ordinarily works out his designs.</i> He can, if he
pleases, by his Holy Spirit get directly at the hearts of
men, but that is his business, and not ours; we have to
do with such words as these: "It pleased God by the
foolishness of preaching to save them that believe."
The Master's commission is not, "Sit still and see the
Spirit of God convert the nations;" but, "Go ye into
all the world and preach the gospel to every creature."
Observe God's method in supplying the race
with food. In answer to the prayer, "Give us this
day our daily bread," he might have bidden the clouds
drop manna, morning by morning, at each man's
door; but he sees that it is for our good to work,
and so he uses the hands of the ploughman and the
sower for our supply. God might cultivate his chosen
farm, the church, by miracle, or by angels; but in great
condescension he blesses her through her own sons and
daughters. He employs us for our own good; for
we who are laborers in his fields receive much more
good for ourselves than we bestow. Labor develops
our spiritual muscle and keeps us in health. "Unto
me," says Paul, "who am less than the least of all
saints, is this grace given, that I should preach among
the Gentiles the unsearchable riches of Christ."</p>
<p>Our great Master means that every laborer on his
farm should receive some benefit from it, for he never
muzzles the mouth of the ox that treadeth out the corn.
The laborer's daily bread comes out of the soil. Though
he works not for himself, but for his Master, yet still he
has his portion of food. In the Lord's granary there is
seed for the sower, but there is also bread for the eater.
However disinterestedly we may serve God in the husbandry
of his church, we are ourselves partakers of the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[155]</SPAN></span>
fruit. It is a great condescension on God's part that
he uses us at all, for we are poor tools at the best, and
more hindrance than help.</p>
<p>The laborers employed by God are all <i>occupied upon
needful work</i>. Notice: "I have planted, Apollos
watered." Who beat the big drum, or blew his own
trumpet? Nobody. On God's farm none are kept for
ornamental purposes. I have read some sermons which
could only have been meant for show, for there was not
a grain of gospel in them. They were ploughs with
the share left out, drills with no wheat in the box, clod-crushers
made of butter. I do not believe that our God
will ever pay wages to men who only walk about his
grounds to show themselves. Orators who display
their eloquence in the pulpit are more like gypsies
who stray on the farm to pick up chickens, than honest
laborers who work to bring forth a crop for their
master. Many of the members of our churches live
as if their only business on the farm was to pluck
blackberries or gather wild flowers. They are great at
finding fault with other people's ploughing and mowing;
but not a hand's turn will they do themselves. Come
on, my good fellows. Why stand ye all the day idle?
The harvest is plenteous, and the laborers are few.
You who think yourselves more cultivated than ordinary
people, if you are indeed Christians, must not strut
about and despise those who are hard at work. If you
do, I shall say, "That person has mistaken his master;
he may probably be in the employ of some gentleman
farmer, who cares more for show than profit; but our
great Lord is practical, and on his estate his laborers
attend to needful labor." When you and I preach or
teach it will be well if we say to ourselves, "What will<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[156]</SPAN></span>
be the use of what I am going to do? I am about to
teach a difficult subject; will it do any good? I have
chosen an abstruse point of theology; will it serve any
purpose?" Brethren, a laborer may work very hard at
a whim of his own, and yet it may be all waste labor.
Some discourses do little more than show the difference
between tweedle-<i>dum</i> and tweedle-<i>dee</i>, and what is the
use of that? Suppose we sow the fields with sawdust,
or sprinkle them with rose-water, what of that? Will
God bless our moral essays, and fine compositions, and
pretty passages? Brethren, we must aim at usefulness:
we must as laborers together with God be occupied with
something that is worth doing. "I," says one, "have
planted": it is well, for planting must be done. "I,"
answers another, "have watered": that also is good
and necessary. See to it that ye can each bring in a solid
report; but let no man be content with the mere child's-play
of oratory, or the getting up of entertainments
and such like.</p>
<p>On the Lord's farm <i>there is a division of labor</i>. Even
Paul did not say, "I have planted and watered." No,
Paul planted. And certainly Apollos could not say,
"I have planted as well as watered." No, it was
enough for him to attend to the watering. No man has
all gifts. How foolish, then, are they who say, "I enjoy
So-and-so's ministry because he edifies the saints in
doctrine; but when he was away the other Sunday I
could not profit by the preacher because he was all for
the conversion of sinners." Yes, he was planting; you
have been planted a good while, and do not need
planting again; but you ought to be thankful that others
are made partakers of the benefit. One soweth and another
reapeth, and therefore instead of grumbling at<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[157]</SPAN></span>
the honest ploughman because he did not bring a sickle
with him, you ought to have prayed for him that he
might have strength to plough deep and break up hard
hearts.</p>
<p>Observe that, on God's farm, <i>there is unity of purpose</i>
among the laborers. Read the text. "Now he that
planteth and he that watereth are one." One Master has
employed them, and though he may send them out at
different times, and to different parts of the farm, yet
they are all one in being used for one end, to work for
one harvest. In England we do not understand what is
meant by watering, because the farmer could not water
all his farm; but in the East a farmer waters almost
every inch of his ground. He would have no crop if
he did not use all means for irrigating the fields. If
you have ever been in Italy, Egypt, or Palestine, you
will have seen a complete system of wells, pumps,
wheels, buckets, channels, little streamlets, pipes, and
so on, by which the water is carried all over the garden
to every plant, otherwise in the extreme heat of the sun
it would be dried up. Planting needs wisdom, watering
needs quite as much, and the piecing of these two works
together needs that the laborers should be of one mind.
It is a bad thing when laborers are at cross purposes, and
work against each other, and this evil is worse in the
church than anywhere else. How can I plant with
success if my helper will not water what I have planted;
or what is the use of my watering if nothing is planted?
Husbandry is spoiled when foolish people undertake it,
and quarrel over it; for from sowing to reaping the work
is one, and all must be done to one end. Let us pull
together all our days, for strife brings barrenness.</p>
<p>We are called upon to notice in our text that <i>all the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[158]</SPAN></span>
laborers put together are nothing at all</i>. "Neither is he that
planteth anything, neither he that watereth." The
workmen are nothing at all without their master. All
the laborers on a farm could not manage it if they had
no one at their head, and all the preachers and Christian
workers in the world can do nothing unless God be
with them. Remember that every laborer on God's farm
has derived all his qualifications from God. No man
knows how to plant or water souls except the Lord
teaches him from day to day. All these holy gifts are
grants of free grace. All the laborers work under
God's direction and arrangement, or they work in
vain. They would not know when or how to do their
work if their Master did not guide them by his Spirit,
without whose help they cannot even think a good
thought. All God's laborers must go to him for their
seed, or else they will scatter tares. All good seed
comes out of God's granary. If we preach, it must be
the true word of God, or nothing can come of it. More
than that, all the strength that is in the laborer's arm
to sow the heavenly seed must be given by the Master.
We cannot preach except God be with us. A sermon
is vain talk and dreary word-spinning unless the Holy
Spirit enlivens it. He must give us both the preparation
of the heart and the answer of the tongue, or we
shall be as men who sow the wind. When the good seed
is sown the whole success of it rests with God. If he
withhold the dew and the rain the seed will never rise
from the ground; and unless he shall shine upon it the
green ear will never ripen. The human heart will remain
barren, even though Paul himself should preach,
unless God the Holy Ghost shall work with Paul and
bless the word to those that hear it. Therefore, since<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[159]</SPAN></span>
the increase is of God alone, put the laborers into their
place. Do not make too much of us; for when we have
done all we are unprofitable servants.</p>
<p>Yet, though inspiration calls the laborers nothing, it
says that <i>they shall be rewarded</i>. God works our good works
in us, and then rewards us for them. Here we have mention
of a personal service, and a personal reward: "Every
man shall receive his own reward according to his own
labor." The reward is proportionate, not to the success,
but to the labor. Many discouraged workers may
be comforted by that expression. You are not to be
paid by results, but by endeavors. You may have a
stiff bit of clay to plough, or a dreary plot of land to
sow, where stones, and birds, and thorns, and travellers,
and a burning sun may all be leagued against the
seed; but you are not accountable for these things;
your reward shall be according to your work. Some
put a great deal of labor into a little field, and make
much out of it. Others use a great deal of labor throughout
a long life, and yet they see but small result, for it
is written, "One soweth, and another reapeth": but the
reaping man will not get all the reward, the sowing man
shall receive his portion of the joy. The laborers are
nobodies, but they shall enter into the joy of their Lord.</p>
<p><i>Unitedly</i>, according to the text, <i>the workers have been
successful</i>, and that is a great part of their reward. "I
have planted, Apollos watered; but God gave the increase."
Frequently brethren say in their prayers, "A
Paul may plant, an Apollos may water, but it is all in
vain unless God gives the increase." This is quite
true; but another truth is too much overlooked,
namely, that when Paul plants and Apollos waters,
God does give the increase. We do not labor in vain.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[160]</SPAN></span>
There would be no increase without God; but then we
are not without God: when such men as Paul and
Apollos plant and water, there is sure to be an increase;
they are the right kind of laborers, they work in a right
spirit, and God is certain to bless them. This is a great
part of the laborer's wages.</p>
<p class="p2">III. So much upon the laborers. Now for the main
point again. <span class="smcap">God himself is the great Worker.</span> He
may use what laborers he pleases, but the increase
comes alone from him. Brethren, you know it is so in
natural things: the most skilful farmer cannot make
the wheat germinate, and grow, and ripen. He cannot
even preserve a single field till harvest time, for the
farmer's enemies are many and mighty. In husbandry
there's many a slip 'twixt the cup and the lip; and
when the farmer thinks, good easy man, that he shall
reap his crop, there are blights and mildews lingering
about to rob him of his gains. God must give the
increase. If any man is dependent on God it is the
husbandman, and through him we are all of us dependent
upon God from year to year for the food by which
we live. Even the king must live by the produce of
the field. God gives the increase in the barn and the
hay-rick; and in the spiritual farm it is even more so,
for what can man do in this business? If any of you
think that it is an easy thing to win a soul I should like
you to attempt it. Suppose that without divine aid
you should try to save a soul—you might as well attempt
to make a world. Why, you cannot create a
fly, how can you create a new heart and a right
spirit? Regeneration is a great mystery, it is out of
your reach. "The wind bloweth where it listeth, and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[161]</SPAN></span>
thou hearest the sound thereof, but canst not tell whence
it cometh, and whither it goeth: so is every one that is
born of the Spirit." What can you and I do in this matter?
it is far beyond our line. We can tell out the truth
of God; but to apply that truth to the heart and conscience
is quite another thing. I have preached Jesus
Christ with my whole heart, and yet I know that I have
never produced a saving effect upon a single unregenerate
man unless the Spirit of God has opened the heart
and placed the living seed of truth within it. Experience
teaches us this. Equally is it the Lord's work to
keep the seed alive when it springs up. We think we
have converts, and we are not long before we are disappointed
in them. Many are like blossoms on our apple
trees; they are fair to look upon, but they do not come
to anything; and others are like the many little apples
which fall off long before they have come to any size.
He who presides over a great church, and feels an agony
for the souls of men, will soon be convinced that if God
does not work there will be no work done: we shall see
no conversion, no sanctification, no final perseverance,
no glory brought to God, no satisfaction for the passion
of the Saviour, unless the Lord be with us. Well
said our Lord, "Without me ye can do nothing."</p>
<p class="p2">Briefly I would draw certain practical lessons out
of this important truth: the first is, if the whole farm
of the church belongs exclusively to the great Master
Worker, and the laborers are worth nothing without
him, <i>let this promote unity among all whom he employs</i>. If
we are all under one Master, do not let us quarrel. It
is a miserable business when we cannot bear to see good
being done by those of a different denomination who<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[162]</SPAN></span>
work in ways of their own. If a new laborer comes
on the farm, and he uses a hoe of a new shape, shall I
become his enemy? If he does his work better than I
do mine, shall I be jealous? Do you not remember
reading in the Scriptures that, upon one occasion, the
disciples could not cast out a devil? This ought to
have made them humble; but to our surprise we read a
few verses further on that they saw one casting out
devils in Christ's name, and they forbade him because he
followed not with their company. <i>They</i> could not cast
out the devil themselves, and they forbade those who
could. A certain band of people are going about winning
souls, but because they are not doing it in our
fashion, we do not like it. It is true they have odd
ways; but they do really save souls, and that is the
main point. Instead of cavilling, let us encourage all
on Christ's side. Wisdom is justified of her children,
though some of them are far from handsome. The
laborers ought to be satisfied with the new ploughman if
their Master smiles upon him. Brother, if the great
Lord has employed you, it is no business of mine to
question his choice. Can I lend you a hand? Can
I show you how to work better? Or can you show me
how I can improve? This is the proper behavior of
one workman to another.</p>
<p>This truth, however, ought to <i>keep all the laborers
very dependent</i>. Are you going to preach, young man?
"Yes, I am going to do a great deal of good." Are
you? Have you forgotten that you are nothing?
"Neither is he that planteth anything." A divine is
coming brimful of the gospel to comfort the saints. If
he is not coming in strict dependence upon God, he, too,
is nothing. "Neither is he that watereth anything."<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[163]</SPAN></span>
Power belongeth unto God. Man is vanity and his
words are wind; to God alone belongeth power and
wisdom. If we keep our places in all lowliness our
Lord will use us; but if we exalt ourselves he will leave
us to our nothingness.</p>
<p>Next notice that <i>this fact ennobles everybody who labors
in God's husbandry</i>. My soul is lifted up with joy when I
mark these words, "For we are laborers together with
God": mere laborers on his farm, and yet laborers
<i>with him</i>. Does the Lord work with us? We know he
does by the signs following. "My Father worketh
hitherto, and I work," is language for all the sons of
God as well as for the great Firstborn. God is with
you, my brethren, when you are serving him with all your
heart. Speaking to your class concerning Jesus, it is
God that speaks by you; picking up that stranger on
the way, and telling him of salvation by faith, Christ is
speaking through you even as he spoke with the woman
at the well; addressing the rough crowd in the open
air, young man, if you are preaching pardon through
the atoning blood, it is the God of Peter who is testifying
of his Son, even as he did on the day of Pentecost.</p>
<p>But, lastly, <i>how this should drive us to our knees</i>.
Since we are nothing without God, let us cry mightily
unto him for help in this our holy service. Let both
sower and reaper pray together, or they will never rejoice
together. If the blessing be withheld, it is because
we do not cry for it and expect it. Brother laborers,
come to the mercy-seat, and we shall yet see the
reapers return from the fields bringing their sheaves
with them, though, perhaps, they went forth weeping to
the sowing. To our Father, who is the husbandman,
be all glory, for ever and ever. Amen.</p>
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