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Blessed to Be Threshed
The threshing floor is an image for a place of purification and
humility before God, where He finds us in a place of absolute desperation and
provides the door of hope to an inheritance prepared for us.
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There is also an aspect of judgment that takes place at the threshing floor. This imagery is reinforced in the parable of the wheat and tares, where the world is a field and the harvest is the end of the age, where reapers are sent out to gather the wheat and burn the tares.
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All these symbols allude to a threshing floor experience where
good and evil will be separated once and for all. Our consolation as believers
is that according to John, Jesus is the Master of the harvest that is to come.
We can find rest and peace in that fact.
by: Nathan Williams
Thinking back to
the turn of the new year, prophetic voices from across the Christian spectrum
were encouraging their audiences to look forward to a year of spiritual clarity
and breakthrough.
Sayings like “2020 —
Year of Plenty” and “20/20 Vision” were commonplace on social media feeds.
As the year draws
nearer to a close, the catchy phrases now seem far removed from the realities
we faced in 2020.
It is undeniable
that the world has changed over the last months.
Unemployment, riots
and protests seem to be a regular feature on the night-time news.
Uncertainty,
disunity and anxiety have flourished as many around the world have periodically
been placed under lockdown with restricted movement and new regulations being
implemented on what we can wear, say and do.
It has been a
challenging, testing time.
A Threshing Experience
Many
have wondered if this pandemic is part of God’s prophetic plan for the world,
or if it was hatched by, as Paul says, “the
rulers of the darkness of this world” (Ephesians 6:12 KJV).
Either way, I am
reminded of a pertinent verse in the story of Joseph.
After burying their
father, Jacob, at the Cave of Machpelah near Hebron, the 12 brothers all
returned to Egypt.
The brothers
responsible for selling Joseph into slavery now feared retribution. Without
their father to intervene, would Joseph’s favor towards them fade?
In absolute
humility, the brothers came before Joseph and prostrated themselves.
Joseph’s
response carries an eternal truth: “But
as for you, you meant evil against me; but God meant it for good, in order to
bring it about as it is this day, to save many people alive” (Genesis 50:20).
Joseph had to
endure many trials and tribulations, but the Lord used even the wicked schemes
of men to bring about His perfect plan of redemption, elevating Joseph to a
significant position of authority, influence and wealth.
Joseph experienced
what can figuratively be referred to as a threshing floor experience.
The threshing floor
is a physical place with rich symbolism.
It is the place
where good is separated from evil, true from false, and what is useful from
what is useless.
Just like in a
physical threshing process where sheaves of grain are beaten or crushed to
bring about this separation, we may also endure times of crushing in our
spiritual walk with the Lord in order that the good the Lord intended may come
forth.
In ancient agrarian
communities, the threshing floor was such a central part of life that many
non-agricultural activities also took place there.
The large, flat
surface offered a space for cultural events such as marriage ceremonies and
other religious rituals.
In this way, the
threshing floor was not only an agricultural space but also a sacred space.
In ancient Near
East culture, the LORD (YHWH) was the Creator and Sustainer of life, causing
rain to fall and bringing forth food from the earth.
It is not
surprising then that His divine presence was believed to be at the threshing
floor, where prophets would see visions and receive prophetic words.
After all, the
threshing floor was to an agricultural community the very source of their
livelihood, resulting in its association with the Creator.
As I started to
read more about the threshing floor, I was amazed to find that it was not only
a symbol of judgment but could also be a symbol of blessing, answered prayer,
provision and redemption.
Building on Threshed Ground
Being called a man
after God’s own heart (1
Samuel 13:14)
is probably the highest compliment anyone can receive.
However, King David
was a man with weaknesses and flaws who faced many threshing floor experiences
in his life.
In 2 Samuel 24, we
read about one such experience. King David ignored the wise counsel of his military
commander, Joab, and decided to conduct a census of Israel and Judah.
The decision had
terrible consequences in that a plague broke out among the people, killing
70,000 Israelites (2
Samuel 24:15).
In His mercy, the
Lord relented in the midst of judgment, and the Angel of the Lord, sent to
destroy the inhabitants of Jerusalem, strangely came to rest at the threshing
floor of Araunah (2
Samuel 24:16).
Here David humbled
himself before the Lord, built an altar and sacrificed on the threshing floor (2 Samuel 24:25).
David also bought
the threshing floor of Araunah, and years later, his son, King Solomon, built
the Temple — the dwelling place of the Lord among men — on that exact spot.
The symbolism of
the threshing floor is an integral part of this story of redemption.
We can identify the
crushing that David endured through the loss of life and judgment on his people
for his disobedience, followed by the blessing that came after his repentance.
It had long been a
desire in David’s heart to build the Lord a house, and even though the
fulfillment was not realized in his lifetime, the Lord decided to answer
David’s deepest desire through his son Solomon.
The spiritual
lessons in this story are striking.
The threshing floor
is the place where our hearts are purified from sin, and the crushing process
or tribulation which we endure has a purpose: to reveal within us the good and
the bad, the useful and the useless.
On the threshing
floor, we are confronted with our own weaknesses and failures, but when we have
a pure heart, we can meet with God and understand His voice.
Eventually, the
painful threshing process will be turned to good, fulfilling the long-held
dreams and desires of our hearts.
Purification and Redemption
We see a symbolic
picture of the character of the Lord as Redeemer in the story of David’s
great-grandmother, Ruth.
Widowed after the
deaths of their husbands, Ruth and her mother-in-law, Naomi, found themselves
forsaken and in a hopeless situation.
After leaving her
homeland of Moab and pledging allegiance to the God of Israel, Ruth returned
with Naomi to Judah to find redemption at the hand of Boaz (Ruth 2:8–13).
Ruth’s petition to
Boaz — her kinsman redeemer, the family member of her late husband who could
redeem her from widowhood and restore her to an inheritance — took place at the
threshing floor.
It is a beautiful
picture among the grain and chaff; a person totally surrendered, humbled and in
need of redemption.
The threshing floor
is then also a place to which the Lord brings us, His children, where we can
find redemption.
It is
also where we can hear our Kinsman Redeemer say: “And now, my daughter, do not fear. I will do for you all that you
request, for all the people of my town know that you are a virtuous woman” (Ruth 3:11).
Ruth was a Gentile,
descended from an idolatrous nation, who left behind her wayward beliefs to
follow after the one true God.
In the story of
Ruth, the threshing floor is an image for a place of purification and humility
before God, where He finds us in a place of absolute desperation and provides
the door of hope to an inheritance prepared for us.
The Right to Thresh
There is also an
aspect of judgment that takes place at the threshing floor.
Referring
to Jesus (Yeshua), John the Baptist says, “I
indeed baptize you with water unto repentance, but He who is coming after me is
mightier than I, whose sandals I am not worthy to carry. He will baptize you
with the Holy Spirit and fire. His winnowing fan is in His hand, and He will
thoroughly clean out His threshing floor, and gather His wheat into the barn;
but He will burn up the chaff with unquenchable fire” (Matthew 3:11–12).
This imagery is
reinforced in the parable of the wheat and tares (Matthew 13:24–43), where the world
is a field and the harvest is the end of the age, where reapers are sent out to
gather the wheat and burn the tares.
All these symbols
allude to a threshing floor experience where good and evil will be separated
once and for all.
Our consolation as
believers is that according to John, Jesus is the Master of the harvest that is
to come. We can find rest and peace in that fact.
We
see this contrasted in the book of Luke, where Satan is doing the sifting: “Simon, Simon, behold, Satan has demanded
permission to sift you like wheat; but I have prayed for you, that your faith
may not fail” (Matthew
22:31–32a
We do have an enemy
who seeks our destruction. He desires that we would lose our faith in the
threshing floor process and that we would be removed like chaff when the winds
of separation blow.
Remarkably, we know
that the Master of the threshing floor is praying for us and interceding for
us.
Bearing this in
mind, we can begin to embrace the threshing for God’s greater purposes — for
the building of his eternal Kingdom and for the fulfillment of the redemption
story.
Embrace the Threshing
My pastor often says: “The Lord is always speaking, but we are not always listening.”
During this time of
upheaval, the Lord has been speaking. He has been speaking to unbelievers, the
Church, politicians and political systems, and each of us individually.
The question is:
Have we been listening? Perhaps we have to acknowledge that the prophecies of
plenty and perfect vision came in a package that we did not recognize or
expect.
Maybe we need to
concede that the redemption of the Lord comes through a process of crushing,
tribulations and threshing so that many people can be saved and good brought
forth from evil.
Our world is being
shaken, crushed and I believe brought ever nearer to the final threshing floor,
where the wheat will be gathered into storehouses and the chaff gathered to be
thrown into the fire.
If we are indeed in
this season of physical threshing, it is in preparation for something greater
to come.
We need to be
prepared mentally and spiritually to step onto God’s threshing floor with our
lamps filled with fresh oil.
It is where we will
meet and commune with our Kinsman Redeemer. The threshing will result in the
greatest blessing and redemption that He has prepared for us.
Our promise is that the Lord will not thresh beyond what we are able to stand: “Grain for bread is crushed, indeed, he does not continue to thresh it forever. Because the wheel of his cart and his horses eventually damage it, he does not thresh it longer. This also comes from the LORD of hosts, who has made His counsel wonderful and His wisdom great” (Isaiah 28:28–29 NASB).
Nathan Williams, Director of Marketing and Communications
Bridges For Peace: Christians
supporting Israel and building relationships
between
Christians and Jews in Israel and around the world
https://www.bridgesforpeace.com/letter/blessed-to-be-threshed/
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