The Fallow Ground
Jer. 4:1-4 Op. 82 Cl.(screen)
Our scripture reading was from Jeremiah but today we
are going to focus on Hosea because both prophets are
issuing the exact same warning to Israel. So, with that
in mind please turn with me to Hosea 10:12: “Sow to
yourselves in righteousness, reap in mercy; break up
your fallow ground: for it is time to seek the Lord, till
he come and rain righteousness upon you.” (Prayer)
The first three chapters of Hosea set the stage as to
why God responds the way he does to Israel's
unfaithfulness. God tells Hosea to marry Gomer, who
is repeatedly unfaithful to him. This is a picture of
God's relationship to Israel. God is a faithful and
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loving husband who has been tossed aside by his
unfaithful wife, Israel, for lovers who only disappoint
and betray her. Then chapters four through ten
describes in various ways God's grace, Israel's
disgrace, God's discipline, and then God's amazing
grace. And then in chapters eleven through fourteen,
we see a change in tone focusing more on God's
compassion for His people. Today we are going to
focus on chapter ten and Hosea calling Israel back to
whole hearted devotion to God.
The more Israel prospered the more they built altars
and remodeled their pillars so that all over Samaria
there are now new altars and remodeled pillars,
dedicated to the worship of Baal. God did all he could
to ensure that Israel prospered and instead of showing
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gratitude for His grace they became increasingly
unfaithful. They had put aside the Lord for another
lover. And so, Baal was getting credit for God's
provision and God was being robbed of his glory.
Israel was undermining the very purpose for which
they were chosen, to be a light to the nations. They
were devoted to religion but living in rebellion to
God, saying one thing and doing another. And thus, it
was Israel to whom the prophet Hosea was
writing these solemn words, for
individually, and as a nation, they had
rebelled against the Lord.
Hosea was calling the nation of Israel to
repent of their sins, return to their first
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love, and seek the Lord with all their heart,
if they were to avoid the judgement that
had been prophesied. The people of God
were to rend their hearts in sincerity and
truth and not to simply tear their clothes in
an outward show of remorse and other
hypocritical actions.
If the coming judgement of God was to be
averted, the people of God had to rend
their hearts and not their garments. They
were to sow with a view to righteousness
and reap in accordance to mercy and
loving-kindness. They were to live in a way
that honoured the Lord. They were to have
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a change of heart and not simply give an
outward show of remorse. They were to
break up the uncultivated ground in their
hardened and rebellious hearts. For too
long Israel had gone her own way. The
time had come for them to seek the Lord,
and to seek after Him with their whole
heart. The Jews were a nation of farmers,
and it is therefore a common thing for God
to use scenes from their daily lives as
illustrations. Hosea addresses them also as
a nation of backsliders, but uses words
that farmers and shepherds are familiar
with. He rebukes them for their idolatry
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and sharply warns them of the impending
judgments of God. "Sow to yourselves in
righteousness and reap according to
mercy," Hosea warned. "Break up your
fallow ground: for it is time to seek the
Lord."
But the call to break up the fallow ground
and turn over the unploughed earth is an
equally urgent call to the body of Christ
and as a church we would do well to heed
the prophet’s call. Today, as then, many
Christians have strayed far away from the
gospel of grace and are proclaiming
another gospel and looking to a different
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Jesus. And thus, the call to break up the
fallow ground. But what exactly does
Hosea mean by ‘fallow ground.’
There are some things about fallow ground
we need to discover this morning. First of
all, fallow ground is ground that was once
productive but now lays waste. At one
time it gave forth a bountiful harvest. Now
it is desolate. Hosea could identify with the
need to break up the fallow ground. He
remembered Israel’s glorious past. He
remembered the miraculous deliverance…
he remembered the Red Sea crossing… he
remembered the manna from heaven… he
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remembered the water from a rock… he
remembered God’s wonderful watch care
and presence. But these were now fading
from memory. Israel had sinned against a
holy God. They had left their first love. And
this straying away from God had led to the
prophet’s call. We can identify with the
need for this call in our time as well.
Sadly, our churches have grown cold as
well. Many have become more interested
in playing church than in changing lives.
Many have become more interested in
socials rather than souls. Many have
become more interested in the corporation
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than the congregations. Many have
become more interested in the windows
than the widows. They care more for the
yard, than the youth. What used to be a
great harvest field has now become fallow
ground.
There was a show on television called
“Married with Children”. On the show the
father, named Al Bundy was a lady’s shoe
salesman. He always felt as though life
had dealt him a bad hand. However, Al
went to Polk High School and played
football. During one game he scored 4
touchdowns. This was a story he will tell
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over and over, trying to make himself feel
good, trying to hold on to some former
glory.
Sadly, the church is oftentimes this very
way. We hear things like I remember when
the church used to be full. I remember
when we would have half night or whole
night prayer services; I remember the
socials, the wilderness experiences, I
remember the joy experienced when
coming to church, and I say yes, all those
things were true but the obvious question I
have to ask is brethren, what happened?
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Maybe the obvious answer is that we have
allowed the ground to become fallow. I can
recall when we were growing up there
were what was called red bottoms all
across Anguilla. And in those days
basically all of them were cultivated.
Individuals had their own parcels of land
and all of them were cultivated. You had
peas, potatoes, guinea corn, you name it.
I used the word ‘had’ when I was referring
to the red bottoms, but in reality, they are
still there. However very and I mean very
few are being cultivated. Most of them are
just there. But there are no peas, no corn,
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no potatoes. Instead, there is just bush,
grass and weeds. And that brings me to
the next fact about fallow ground.
Fallow ground produces thorns and
thistles. The cares if this world choke out
the Word of God. The deceitfulness of
riches causes wrong priorities. Idolatry
replaces total dedication to the Lord.
Fallow Ground produces the weeds of
bitterness. Heb 12:14-15 admonishes us
to “Follow peace with all men, and
holiness, without which no man shall see
the Lord: (15) Looking diligently lest any
man fail of the grace of God; lest any root
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of bitterness springing up trouble you, and
thereby many be defiled.” As we gather in
God’s house and sing songs like Sweet,
Sweet Spirit, we must constantly guard
against one of Satan’s favorite tools to use
against Christians, and that is bitterness.
Bitterness often lurks beneath the surface
of singing saints. Bitter believers are often
offended and are quick to cause divisions
in the church. Lack of cooperation can lead
one to disappointment. Lack of results can
lead to bitterness. Jealousy and bitterness
often go hand in hand. Notice in Heb
12:15 at the end of the verse…”and
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thereby many be defiled.” If you have
become bitter toward a fellow Christian, or
towards the church, or even towards God,
your heart has become fallow ground, and
the ground that once was fruitful and
pleasant has become useless and barren.
And the longer the land remains fallow,
the more difficult it is to recultivate it. The
longer a person remains outside the will of
Christ, the more difficult it becomes to win
them back. A next thing about fallow
Ground is that it produces slothful and lazy
Christians. Slothful Christians are slow to
do what God has commanded. Slothful
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Christians hold back from service for the
Lord. Slothful Christians find excuses for
not getting involved. Slothful Christians
lead unproductive lives.
When a ground is left fallow, it not only
produces weeds but it becomes hard. That
is why we are told to break up the fallow
ground. The ground is nothing more than
our hearts. We must break up the ground
that has been left unattended. Unattended
means simply something not dealt with.
Issues in our lives will not simply go away
– they become a hardening agent and
cause us to justify our feelings and
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actions! We feel that we are right in
holding resentment for wrong done against
us! When we fail to deal with issues of
resentment and unforgiveness our hearts
become fallow.
Also, fallow ground is unused ground.
Saints who are not involved in the work of
God oftentimes become hard and callused
when it come to the harvest. In other
words – God wants to use us to reproduce
and bring forth a harvest. But he cannot if
our lives are not ready and cultivated for
use. Lack of interest in soulwinning and
witnessing is evidence of fallow ground.
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Too busy with secular activities to get
involved in the work of God is evidence of
fallow ground! Hosea said that ‘breaking
up the fallow ground ‘will proceed the rains
of refreshing that come from the Lord! In
other words, revival comes after we break
up the fallow ground! True revival cannot
come with hardened attitudes. True revival
cannot come with feelings of
unforgiveness. True revival cannot come
with a lack of interest in the work of God.
Revival can only come after the breaking
of the fallow ground.
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So How Do We Break Up This Fallow
Ground? Fallow Ground can only be broken
up by the plow of God’s Word. First you
must recognize the fallow ground in your
life. Not all of your heart is fallow ground.
Some of it is good fertile ground. The
fallow part is that part you’ve never
surrendered. The hatred you have
harbored for someone in spite of belonging
to the Lord. The resentment toward your
spouse, your neighbor, or even your
children. The sin that remains pervasive in
your heart…the one you struggle with. The
weight and worries you carry with you
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everywhere you go. The unwillingness to
work for the Lord. The unwillingness to be
a witness for Him. That thing that keeps
you from serving Him completely. That’s
the fallow ground in your life. That’s what
you need to deal with today. Fallow ground
needs to be broken up by remembrance
and repentance. We need to remember
where we came from, and who we belong
and the price that was paid for us. In 1Co
6:19-20 we are told: “What? Know ye not
that your body is the temple of the Holy
Ghost which is in you, which ye have of
God, and ye are not your own? (20) For ye
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are bought with a price: therefore, glorify
God in your body, and in your spirit, which
are God's”. When we learn to look at
ourselves for who we are, and look at
Christ for who He is, repentance and
service will come easy! Rom 12:1 says “I
beseech you therefore, brethren, by the
mercies of God, that ye present your
bodies a living sacrifice, holy, acceptable
unto God, which is your reasonable
service.” God doesn’t expect anything
unreasonable from His children. His way of
salvation is simple. His way of
communication is simple. He simply
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expects His own children to trust and obey
Him. Fallow ground can be broken up by
humility and prayer. We breakup the
fallow ground when we pray for sensitivity
to the needs of others. In Christ’s Object
Lessons, p. 56 Sis White writes: “The
garden of the heart must be cultivated.
The soil must be broken up by deep
repentance for sin. Poisonous, Satanic
plants must be uprooted. The soil once
overgrown by thorns can be reclaimed
only by diligent labor. So, the evil
tendencies of the natural heart can be
overcome only by earnest effort in the
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name and strength of Jesus. The Lord bids
us by His prophet, ‘Break up your fallow
ground, and sow not among thorns.’ ‘Sow
to yourselves in righteousness; reap in
mercy.’ This work He desires to
accomplish for us, and He asks us to co-
operate with Him.”
Brethren, our church is in desperate need
of a revival but if each and every one of us
do not experience revival in our hearts, the
revival the church needs will never come.
So, this morning…individually and as a
church, I challenge you to humble
yourselves before a holy God. I challenge
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you to pray. I challenge you to seek His
face. The question we each have to answer
for ourselves is: Are you willing to break
up your fallow ground this morning? When
God looks upon your life, does He see a
fertile field, or does He see fallow ground?
What would you like Him to see? Are we
ready for God to begin a great work in our
church? In order for Him to do that He
needs tools He can work with. Those tools
are you and I. Let us pray that He would
be able to use us for His glory today.
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