Banking on Food or Food Banking?

This year, at the time of year when there will be celebrations for harvests which have been safely gathered in, we are more conscious than ever of problems of having sufficient food to feed families.
In some parts of the world, there are still droughts which cause crops to fail and livestock to die. In other areas floods wash away the crops. In many parts of the world. people are too poor to buy food
In Britain and the developed world, we have largely avoided such problems until now when the rising cost of living is putting many people under increasing pressure as they seek to feed their families. We used to bank on being able to feed our children adequately and relatively cheaply, but now more and more people are turning to Food Banks to provide sufficient sustenance. Unlike some parts of the world, we still have adequate supplies of food but low wage rates combined with the rising cost of living are forcing some people to choose between eating or heating, or other essentials.
As the problem increases, perhaps it will make us more aware of the difficulties of those in the Third World who struggle daily to find food to eat and who are facing the same rising costs for even the meagre supplies that might be available.
In a world provided with so many resources for agriculture by a gracious God, who promised that ‘as long as the world exists, there will be a time for planting and a time for harvest’ (Gen.8.22[GNB]), we need to be more conscious of what we, humankind, do which subverts God’s provision – the actions which lead to climate change, the disruption to the distribution of food supplies caused by war, the economic factors of supply and demand which push up prices beyond those simply required to meet the production and marketing costs.
Jesus fed 4,000 hungry people because He had ‘compassion’ on them (Mark 8.1-9). He has compassion on all who are hungry in this country as well as the rest of the world, but He needs our compassion to support the Food Banks which are now so important in our country and also the compassion of governments and the large trading companies to resolve the inequalities which exist around the world where people cannot bank on food being available and cannot even go to Food Banks when their food runs out.
We cannot really celebrate harvest when so many cannot adequately access its provision.








