God does not rain on empty ground. Every great harvest in Scripture began with someone who was willing to sow before the sky looked promising. Isaiah 30:23 is the verse that proves it, and it is the wake-up call you did not know you needed today.
You have been faithful. You have given when it cost you. You have prayed when nothing moved. You have served when no one was watching. And still the ground looks dry. Before you conclude that nothing is growing, read what God said in Isaiah 30:23.
This morning, His Excellency Bishop Selvister Ponnumuthan shared a verse that carries the weight of a covenant and the warmth of a Father’s voice. It speaks of rain, of abundance, and of broad open fields for lives that have felt confined for too long. Come and sit with Isaiah 30:23 for a few minutes today. It just might change the way you hold your seed.
Rise & Inspire | Wake-Up Calls | Reflection #73
Sunday, 15 March 2026
When God Sends the Rain
A Wake-Up Call from Isaiah 30:23
“He will give rain for the seed with which you sow the ground, and grain, the produce of the ground, will be rich and plenteous. On that day your cattle will graze in broad pastures.”
Isaiah 30:23 (NRSV)
Verse shared this morning by His Excellency, Rt. Rev. Dr. Selvister Ponnumuthan
Wake Up to This: God Does Not Forget What You Have Sown
Have you ever sown something in faith and then waited — day after day — wondering whether anything would come of it? A prayer you offered without certainty. An act of love no one acknowledged. A dream you buried quietly in the ground of obedience, trusting that God saw it even when no one else did.
That is exactly the situation the people of Israel were in when the prophet Isaiah delivered these words. They had endured a season of rebellion, pride, and misplaced trust — leaning on Egypt rather than on their God. Judgment had come, correction had arrived, and now the Lord was speaking words of restoration. And notice what He promised first: not armies, not political power, not a new king on the throne. He promised rain for the seed.
That is the voice of a Father who remembers every seed His child has ever planted. He has not overlooked your faithful sowing. He is simply timing the rain.
The Rhythm of the Faithful Life: Sow First, Rain Comes After
Isaiah 30:23 contains a profound spiritual sequence that we dare not miss. God does not rain on empty ground. The promise is rain for the seed with which you sow. In other words, the sowing comes first. The obedience comes first. The planting in faith comes first.
Too many of us are waiting to see the rain before we are willing to scatter the seed. We want guaranteed results before we risk anything. We want confirmation before commitment. But the rhythm of the Kingdom has always worked the other way around: you step into the field, you break up the hard ground with your hands, you sow in tears and in trust — and then God sends the rain.
This is not a call to reckless effort. It is a call to Spirit-led, faith-fuelled action. You have a calling stirring inside you. You have a gift waiting to be offered. You have a conversation you have been putting off, a service you have been deferring, a step of generosity you have been delaying. Sow it. Today. And trust that God is watching the ground.
Rich and Plenteous: God Does Not Do Things by Half
The second movement of this verse is the harvest promise: the grain, the produce of the ground, will be rich and plenteous. Not barely sufficient. Not just enough to get by. Rich and plenteous.
This is the character of God breaking through in agricultural language. He is not a God of scarcity. He is the God who fed five thousand with five loaves and had twelve baskets left over. He is the God who turned water into wine — the best wine — at a party where the host had run dry. He is the God of Psalm 23, who spreads a table in the presence of enemies and fills the cup until it overflows.
When God restores, He does not restore partially. When He brings the harvest, He does not bring half a harvest. The enemy may have stolen seasons from you, wasted years may have felt like dead ground — but when the Lord speaks the word of restoration over your life, it comes back rich and plenteous. This is not wishful thinking; this is the covenant character of the God who does not lie.
Broad Pastures: Room to Move, Room to Breathe, Room to Grow
Then comes the image that stops every tired soul in its tracks. On that day your cattle will graze in broad pastures. After seasons of constriction, God promises expansion. After tight places, open fields. After the siege — because the original context of Isaiah 30 includes the threat of Sennacherib’s army hemming them in — God promises room to breathe, room to roam, room to flourish.
This is not merely agricultural poetry. It is a picture of the life God intends for His people: lives that are not cramped by anxiety, not caged by fear, not hemmed in by the failures of yesterday. Lives with room in them. Lives with margin, with generosity, with the kind of freedom that comes only when you know that the Lord your God is your shepherd and your provider.
Are you living in a narrow place right now? Has life pressed in on you from every side? Hear the word of the Lord today: He is preparing broad pastures. He is not finished with your story. The same God who brought Israel out of the tight grip of Sennacherib’s threat can bring you out of whatever narrow place you are navigating today.
The Context We Cannot Ignore: Restoration Follows Repentance
We would be dishonest if we did not read Isaiah 30:23 in its full context. The chapter opens with a people who had gone their own way, trusted in human alliances, refused to listen to God’s voice. And God, faithful as He always is, called them back. The restoration in verse 23 flows directly out of the grace of verses 18 to 22: God waiting to be gracious, God rising to show compassion, Israel at last turning away from its idols.
The sequence is vital. It is not that God rewards good behaviour with material blessing in some transactional economy of merit. Rather, it is that when a people return to God — when they choose to trust the Shepherd rather than the Egypt of their own devising — they begin to live in the reality of His provision. The broad pastures were always there. The rain was always ready. Repentance is not earning the blessing; it is simply returning to the field where the blessing grows.
This is the wake-up call hidden in the beauty of verse 23. Before the rain, there was a turning. Before the harvest, there was a homecoming. If today you find yourself in a dry season, the question worth sitting with quietly is not only “When will God send the rain?” but also “Is there something I need to lay down, some Egypt I need to walk away from, before I can receive what God has been waiting to give?”
A Word for Today: This is Your Field, This is Your Season
On this Sunday morning, the 15th of March 2026, these ancient words land with fresh weight. You may be in a season of sowing — giving without visible return, serving without recognition, praying without breakthrough, loving without reciprocation. Do not stop. The rain is tied to the seed, and the seed is tied to the sowing. Keep your hands in the soil.
Or you may be in a season of harvest — watching what you sowed in tears come up in unexpected abundance. If so, receive it with gratitude. Remember that the richness of what you are holding came from the hand of God, not from the strength of your effort. Give thanks loudly and generously. And then sow again, because the faithful life is never just one season.
Or perhaps you are standing at the edge of the field, unsure whether the ground is ready, unsure whether you have anything worth planting. Hear this clearly: God does not ask you to assess the ground before you sow. He asks you to sow, and He promises to send the rain. Your job is the seed. His job is the season.
Prayer
Lord God, You are the Giver of every good season. Thank You that You never forget the seed we have sown in faith, even when we have forgotten it ourselves. Forgive us for the seasons when we ran to every place except to You. Call us back, as You called Israel back, and meet us at the edge of our own fields with the promise of rain. Send Your Spirit like the former and latter rains over every dry and waiting place in our lives. Let the harvest be rich and plenteous — not just for our own benefit, but so that we may feed others with what You have given us. Lead us into the broad pastures You have prepared, and may we graze there with joy and peace, knowing that the Lord our God is our Shepherd and our Provider. Amen.
Reflect & Respond
What seed have you been reluctant to sow because you are waiting for a sign of rain first? What would it look like today to trust God with that seed?
A Companion Post to Wake-Up Call Reflection #73 on Isaiah 30:23
The Whole Counsel of the Field
Sowing, Tears, and Harvest Across the Scriptures
Introduction: One Theme, Many Fields
Isaiah 30:23 opened the field. God promised rain for the seed, a rich and plenteous harvest, and broad pastures for lives that had felt hemmed in. But that single verse is not where the theme of sowing and reaping begins or ends in Scripture. It is, in fact, one voice in a vast and beautifully orchestrated chorus that runs from the wisdom literature of Solomon to the prophets of Israel to the letters of Paul.
This companion post traces that chorus through five passages, each of which deepens, extends, or challenges the theme in a distinct way. Read together with Isaiah 30:23, they form a complete theology of the field: what it means to sow faithfully, what tears have to do with harvest, what happens when people sow wickedness instead of righteousness, and what to do when the principle seems to have failed altogether.
Each passage is quoted in full in the NRSVUE, consistent with the prior reflection, and each is explored through its core themes, its connections to the others, and its practical bearing on the life of faith today.
Part One
Those Who Sow in Tears
Psalm 126 and the Cost of Faithful Planting
The Text
Psalm 126 is one of the fifteen Songs of Ascents, sung by pilgrims climbing toward Jerusalem. It celebrates the return from Babylonian exile with an intensity that is almost disorienting: the people were like those who dream, their mouths filled with laughter, the nations watching in astonishment. Then, mid-psalm, the mood pivots. The past restoration becomes the basis for a present prayer: restore us again, O Lord, like the watercourses in the Negeb. And out of that prayer comes one of the most quoted agricultural promises in all of Scripture.
“Those who sow in tears shall reap with shouts of joy. Those who go out weeping, bearing the seed for sowing, shall come home with shouts of joy, carrying their sheaves.”
Psalm 126:5–6 (NRSVUE)
Core Themes
Sowing in Tears: Painful Obedience
The psalmist does not idealise the act of sowing. He pictures a farmer going out into the field in a state of weeping. The seed he carries is precious, limited, and costly to part with. The ground may be hard. The harvest is not yet visible. And yet he goes, and yet he sows.
This tears-while-sowing image holds together two things that our instincts want to separate: grief and obedience. We tend to assume that faithful action should feel confident and clear. The psalmist insists otherwise. Mournful sowing is still sowing. The seed does not require a dry-eyed hand to fall into the ground and grow.
The tears may represent mourning over exile or loss, the weight of intercession, the cost of self-denial, or the sheer exhaustion of persevering through barren seasons. What matters is that the sowing continues despite them.
The Promise of Joy: Future-Oriented Hope
The contrast between verses 5 and 6 is stark and deliberate. Tears now. Shouts of joy later. Weeping on the way out. Singing on the way back. The sower does not return empty-handed; he returns carrying sheaves, the bundled harvest that represents abundance far exceeding what was planted.
The joy is future-oriented. It is not a feeling to be manufactured in the present moment of hard sowing. It is a promised outcome, secured by the character of the God who turned captivity into freedom and desert into streams. The tears do not cancel the harvest. They are part of the journey toward it.
The Negeb: Transformation of Impossible Ground
Verse 4 prays for restoration like the watercourses in the Negeb, the bone-dry desert in southern Israel that would, after the right rains, suddenly run with torrents of water. The imagery is deliberately extreme. The most barren ground imaginable can become flowing water. The implication is clear: if God can do that to the Negeb, He can do it to your situation.
Connections to Isaiah 30:23
Isaiah 30:23 emphasised the sequence: sow first, then God sends rain for the seed. Psalm 126 fills in what that sowing may feel like: it may feel like weeping. It may feel like going out into an uncertain field carrying something precious and wondering whether it will come to anything at all.
Together, the two passages paint a complete picture of faithful planting. Isaiah provides the promise of provision: God will send rain for what you sow. Psalm 126 provides the portrait of the sower: someone who goes out anyway, tears and all, trusting the promise they cannot yet see.
What precious seed have you been carrying that you have hesitated to sow because of pain or uncertainty? How might entrusting it to God, even tearfully, open the door to future joy?
Part Two
Sow to the Spirit
Galatians 6:7–9 and the Moral Dimension of the Harvest
The Text
Paul writes these three verses near the close of his letter to the Galatians, a community torn between the grace of the gospel and the pressure to return to law-keeping. The immediate context is a call to support those who teach (v.6), bear one another’s burdens (v.2), and persevere in doing good (v.9–10). Into this pastoral exhortation Paul introduces a principle that is at once a warning, a promise, and an encouragement.
“Do not be deceived; God is not mocked, for you reap whatever you sow. If you sow to your own flesh, you will reap corruption from the flesh, but if you sow to the Spirit, you will reap eternal life from the Spirit. So let us not grow weary in doing what is right, for we will reap at harvest time, if we do not give up.”
Galatians 6:7–9 (NRSVUE)
Core Themes
A Universal and Inescapable Law
Paul opens with a solemn double warning: do not be deceived, and God is not mocked. Both phrases point in the same direction: no one circumvents the harvest of what they have sown. The Greek tense underlying the principle carries the sense of ongoing, repeated action, not a single event. The harvest corresponds to the habitual pattern of the life, the direction in which a person consistently sows, day after day, choice after choice.
This is not karma, because karma operates through an impersonal cosmic mechanism. Paul’s principle operates within a personal moral universe overseen by a God who sees, knows, and governs the outcome. The harvest is not accidental. It corresponds to the seed.
Two Fields: Flesh and Spirit
Paul draws a sharp binary between two possible fields. Sowing to the flesh means living oriented around selfish desire, self-reliance, sinful impulse, and, in the specific context of Galatians, the kind of works-righteousness that is ultimately self-serving. The harvest of that sowing is corruption: decay, disintegration, emptiness, and ultimately eternal separation from God.
Sowing to the Spirit means living led by the Holy Spirit, investing in love, generosity, faithfulness, bearing burdens, doing good, sharing with those in need. The harvest of that sowing is eternal life, not merely a future destiny but an abundant quality of life with God that begins now and culminates in eternity.
Do Not Grow Weary: The Pastoral Heart of the Passage
Verse 9 is the passage’s warmest and most urgent word. Paul acknowledges what the psalms have always known: faithful sowing is often costly, slow, and unrewarded by any visible evidence. The temptation to grow weary is real. And so Paul names it directly and then dismantles it with a promise: we will reap at harvest time, if we do not give up.
The due season is not arbitrary. There is a proper time for the harvest of Spirit-led investment to appear. The sole condition for receiving it is perseverance. The sower who quits just before harvest is the one who will not carry sheaves home.
Connections to Earlier Passages
Isaiah 30:23: God promises rain for the seed and a rich harvest. Galatians adds the moral dimension: the nature of the seed determines the nature of the harvest. Faithful Spirit-led sowing, like the obedient sowing of Isaiah, draws down God’s provision.
Psalm 126: Both passages name the emotional cost of faithful sowing and call the sower not to quit. Psalm 126 frames it as tears; Galatians frames it as weariness. Both are overcome by the same assurance: the harvest is coming.
What seeds are you currently sowing most consistently in your relationships, habits, and daily choices? If you are weary in doing good, how does the promise of Galatians 6:9 reframe the season you are in?
Part Three
Break Up Your Fallow Ground
Hosea 10:12–13 and the Urgency of Righteousness
The Text
Hosea 10 is one of the most searching chapters in the prophetic literature of the Old Testament. The northern kingdom of Israel has entered a spiral of prosperity that has deepened rather than diminished its idolatry, political instability, and covenant unfaithfulness. Judgment is on the horizon and the chapter knows it. Into that darkness, two verses shine with an urgent and merciful invitation.
“Sow for yourselves righteousness; reap the fruit of steadfast love; break up your fallow ground, for it is time to seek the Lord, that he may come and rain righteousness upon you. You have ploughed wickedness, you have reaped injustice, you have eaten the fruit of lies. Because you have trusted in your own way, in the multitude of your warriors.”
Hosea 10:12–13 (NRSVUE)
Core Themes
The Present Harvest of Wickedness
Verse 13 does not speak of future consequences. The harvest of Israel’s wicked sowing has already arrived. They have ploughed wickedness, and injustice is already their present reality. They are eating the fruit of lies right now. The bitter harvest is not a warning about what might come; it is a diagnosis of what has already grown.
This echoes Hosea’s earlier word in chapter eight: they sow the wind and they shall reap the whirlwind. Wickedness does not produce a proportional return. It produces something far more destructive and uncontrollable than what was planted.
The Invitation to Reverse Course
Verse 12 is a dramatic pivot. In the middle of a chapter that should feel like pure judgment, God extends an urgent and gracious invitation. Sow for yourselves righteousness. Reap the fruit of steadfast love. Break up your fallow ground.
The fallow ground is the image that carries the deepest pastoral weight. Fallow ground is not simply dry ground. It is ground that has lain unploughed and uncultivated for so long that it has become hard, compacted, and unresponsive. In the agricultural world of ancient Israel, fallow ground required significant effort to break open before any seed could take root. In Hosea’s hands, it becomes a metaphor for the hardened heart that has grown unresponsive to God through prolonged neglect, self-reliance, and idolatry.
Breaking up fallow ground is not a gentle process. It is the hard work of honest repentance, of allowing God’s word and Spirit to penetrate ground that has become resistant to both. It is uncomfortable, disruptive, and necessary.
God’s Rain of Righteousness
The goal of all this breaking and sowing is stated at the close of verse 12: that God may come and rain righteousness upon you. The rain here is not agricultural rain but divine righteousness showering down as mercy, covenant faithfulness, and restoration. The human responsibility is the sowing. The divine response is the rain.
The connection to Isaiah 30:23 is unmistakable. Both passages use the same structure: human sowing precedes divine provision from above. But Hosea adds a layer that Isaiah does not foreground: the ground itself may need to be broken up before the seed can enter it at all.
Connections to Earlier Passages
Isaiah 30:23: Both texts use agricultural imagery to describe the relationship between human obedience and divine provision. Hosea adds the specific call to break up hardened ground, emphasising that repentance is what opens the heart to receive what God is willing to send.
Galatians 6:7–9: Paul universalises the principle that Hosea applies to the national crisis of Israel. Both insist that wickedness yields its own bitter fruit and that righteousness, even costly righteousness, draws down God’s faithful response.
Psalm 126: Psalm 126 emphasises emotional cost during sowing. Hosea emphasises moral cost, the cost of turning away from idols and self-reliance to plant righteousness in ground that has become hard. Both are forms of sacrifice that God honours.
Is there fallow ground in your heart that has grown hard through neglect, bitterness, or self-reliance? What would it mean to break it up today and sow righteousness, trusting God for the rain of His steadfast love?
Part Four
The Sure Reward
Proverbs and the Reliable Law of the Harvest
The Text
The book of Proverbs does not use a single extended passage to develop the sowing and reaping theme. Instead, it embeds the principle throughout, surfacing in brief and pointed observations drawn from the observable patterns of human life. Two verses state it with particular clarity.
“The wicked earn deceptive wages, but those who sow righteousness get a true reward.”
Proverbs 11:18 (NRSVUE)
“Whoever sows injustice will reap calamity, and the rod of his fury will fail.”
Proverbs 22:8 (NRSVUE)
Core Themes
The Deceptive Wages of the Wicked
Proverbs 11:18 opens with a devastating observation about the harvest of the wicked: their wages are deceptive. There may be a short-term appearance of profit. Dishonest sowing can produce what looks, briefly, like a harvest. But the return is false, unstable, and ultimately empty. It does not satisfy. It does not last. It cannot be trusted.
Against that empty return, the proverb places the sure reward of those who sow righteousness. The Hebrew word translated sure or true carries the sense of something firmly established, reliable, and genuinely satisfying. What the righteous sower receives is not a windfall or a lucky return. It is the kind of fruit that God Himself guarantees.
The Failure of Violence and Injustice
Proverbs 22:8 extends the principle into the specific domain of oppression and anger. The person who sows injustice, who plants harm, cruelty, or deceit into their dealings with others, reaps calamity. And the instrument of their own fury, the rod with which they have pressed down on others, ultimately fails. Evil schemes are ultimately self-defeating. The oppressor’s tool of power does not secure the harvest they hoped for. It rots in their hand.
Broader Proverbs on Sowing and Reaping
The principle surfaces in related forms throughout the book. Proverbs 11:24–25 applies it to generosity: the one who gives freely increases, while the one who withholds what is appropriate comes to poverty. Proverbs 1:31 states the same logic with striking directness: they shall eat the fruit of their way. Proverbs 26:27 offers the boomerang image: whoever digs a pit will fall into it. Across all these texts, the governing conviction is the same. Life operates under a moral order that God has embedded in creation, and that order is not fooled.
Connections to Earlier Passages
Isaiah 30:23: Isaiah promises God’s abundant provision for those who sow in faith. Proverbs confirms that the quality of what is sown determines the quality of what is reaped. The sure reward of righteousness and the rich harvest of Isaiah are expressions of the same covenant faithfulness of God.
Galatians 6:7–9: Paul’s affirmation that sowing to the Spirit produces eternal life and sowing to the flesh produces corruption has deep roots in the wisdom tradition of Proverbs. Proverbs provides the observable human evidence; Paul provides the eschatological completion.
Hosea 10:12–13: Hosea applies the principle nationally and prophetically. Proverbs applies it personally and practically. Together they show that the law of the harvest operates at every level of human life, from the individual’s daily choices to the trajectory of an entire nation.
Psalm 126: Psalm 126 focuses on the emotional experience of sowing and reaping. Proverbs focuses on the ethical quality of what is sown. Both assure the faithful that righteous investment is never wasted.
Looking at your most consistent daily patterns of action, speech, and attitude: what kind of seed are those habits planting? How might a shift toward righteousness, however small, change the harvest you are building toward?
Part Five
When the Righteous Reap Hardship
Job 4:8 and the Limits of the Principle
The Text
The book of Job is the most theologically honest engagement with the sowing and reaping principle in all of Scripture. It does not deny the principle. It refuses to let it be misused as a weapon against the suffering. The key verse comes not from Job but from one of his friends, and understanding who speaks it is essential to understanding what the book is saying.
“As I have seen, those who plough iniquity and those who sow trouble reap the same.”
Job 4:8 (NRSVUE)
Who Speaks: Eliphaz the Temanite
This verse is spoken by Eliphaz in his first speech to Job. He is not wrong about the principle itself. Those who cultivate evil do tend to reap its consequences. His error lies in his application: he uses this generally valid observation to explain Job’s specific situation. Since Job is suffering, Eliphaz reasons, Job must have sown wickedness. The logic seems tight. But it is disastrously wrong, and God Himself will say so.
In Job 42:7, after the divine speeches from the whirlwind, God tells Eliphaz directly: you have not spoken of me what is right, as my servant Job has. The friends’ theology was not entirely false. It was fatally incomplete, applied with certainty to a situation it could not fully explain.
Core Themes
The Principle Is Real but Not Exhaustive
Job does not contradict the truth that wickedness tends to produce its own destructive harvest. What Job demonstrates is that the principle cannot be reversed. The fact that some people reap hardship does not mean they sowed wickedness. Innocent suffering is real. Job’s own testimony, confirmed by God in chapters 1 and 2, is that he was blameless and upright. Yet he suffered losses that would have broken most people entirely.
The friends applied a valid general principle as if it were an absolute and universal rule with no exceptions. Job’s entire experience was the exception. God was not absent or unjust. He was operating at a level of sovereignty and purpose that the friends’ tidy theological formula could not contain.
Job’s Restoration: Grace Beyond Formula
The ending of Job is profoundly important for understanding the sowing and reaping theme. Job’s fortunes are restored in chapter 42, doubled in some respects. But this restoration does not come because Job sowed perfectly. It comes by God’s grace, after Job’s repentance and his intercession for his friends. The harvest that closes the book is not a mechanical return on righteous investment. It is a gift from the God who holds all harvests in His sovereign hand.
The Danger of Misapplied Theology
Job’s friends were rebuked not for knowing the principle but for weaponising it. They used it to wound a man who was already broken. This is the pastoral warning embedded in the book: the sowing and reaping principle, applied as a universal explanation for another person’s suffering, becomes a form of cruelty. Comfort first. Theology second. And even then, hold the principle with humility.
Connections to Earlier Passages
Proverbs: Proverbs presents the principle as an observable and reliable pattern of life. Job shows that the pattern, while real and generally true, is not a formula that explains every individual situation. The two books are not in conflict; they are in dialogue.
Psalm 126: Psalm 126 promises that tearful sowing will yield joyful reaping. Job’s story traces the longest and most painful version of that journey. Chapter 42 is Job’s sheaves. But the path from tears to joy ran through depths that Psalm 126 only gestures toward.
Galatians 6:7–9: Paul affirms the principle without qualification in its moral and spiritual application. Job adds the pastoral bracket: be cautious about applying it judgmentally to the suffering of specific people. Sow to the Spirit yourself. Do not use the harvest as a verdict on others.
Isaiah 30:23 and Hosea 10: Both promise God’s blessing on faithful sowing. Job reminds us that faithfulness does not guarantee immunity from hardship or immediate abundance. God’s timing is His own, and His purposes in allowing suffering can exceed any formula the righteous carry into the field.
Have you ever found yourself in Job’s position, sowing faithfully yet reaping hardship? How does his story free you to trust God’s bigger picture, even when the harvest you expected has not yet appeared?
Synthesis: The Full Theology of the Field

Read in sequence, these five passages form a complete and honest theology of sowing and reaping, one that is neither naive nor cynical but rigorously faithful to the full witness of Scripture.
Isaiah 30:23 begins it: God promises rain for the seed you sow, and His harvest is rich and plenteous. The invitation is to plant in faith and trust the divine timing of the rain.
Psalm 126 deepens it: the sowing may be accompanied by tears, real grief, real cost, real uncertainty. But the tears do not disqualify the harvest. The weeping sower will return with sheaves.
Galatians 6:7–9 sharpens it: the nature of the seed determines the nature of the harvest. Sowing to the Spirit draws down eternal life. Sowing to the flesh produces corruption. And when the Spirit-sowing grows wearisome, do not give up. The harvest is coming.
Hosea 10:12–13 adds urgency: before the seed can enter the ground, the ground may need to be broken up. Repentance is the plough. The time to seek the Lord is now, while the invitation is still open and the mercy-rain still possible.
Proverbs confirms it in the everyday: the rewards of righteous sowing are sure, stable, and real. The wages of wickedness are deceptive and ultimately empty. Choose your seeds with care.
And Job guards the whole: the principle is true, but it is not a formula to be applied mechanically to individual suffering. God’s purposes are larger than any harvest theory. Sow righteousness. Hold the principle with open hands. Trust the Farmer.
Rise & Inspire | Wake-Up Calls | Reflection #73 /Scholarly Companion to Reflection #73 | 15 March 2026
Inspired by the daily verse shared by His Excellency, Rt. Rev. Dr. Selvister Ponnumuthan
Copyright © 2026 Rise&Inspire
Website: Home | Blog | About Us | Contact| Resources
Word Count:5436
