DON’T CUT TO THE EDGES!
‘Don’t cut to the edges’ sounds a strange instruction to those gathering in the harvest.
This is the time of year when churches, schools and other organisations will be having harvest festivals, hopefully celebrating the fact that ‘all is safely gathered in’.
The farmers will have done their best to see that they have fully cleared the fields in order to maximise production and there are no stray bits of crop left around.
So a Biblical instruction (Leviticus 23.22) which says ‘When you harvest your fields, do not cut the corn at the edges of your fields’ [GNB] and goes on to say ‘and don’t pick up what falls on the ground’ [CEV] seems strange today. But, in giving this instruction, God also gave the reason for He adds, ‘Leave it for the poor and for those foreigners who live among you,’ that is, the ones who had no land on which to grow anything to support themselves. Cutting right to the edges of the field and picking up what had been dropped, the gleanings, meant that the farmers would be keeping everything for themselves. God’s care is for everyone and those without anything were to be allowed to partake of the harvest.
That links in with our harvest festival services because, in many cases, the gifts of produce given for the harvest displays will be distributed to the poor who have little, to the elderly who can’t get out, or to hospices as a contribution to help their work.
Not many of us now grow our own food, so the items taken to churches, schools and other harvest celebrations are usually bought from supermarkets and shops, but our giving is similar to the edges which were not to be cut in Old Testament times. It is a small amount compared to what we consume but it is a sign that we care for others as the Lord has requested.
Leaving uncut edges for others to harvest was a simple thing to do. It didn’t require any effort, just a choice of action (or inaction, depending how you look at it). Our giving, the providing of those ‘uncut edges’ and ‘gleanings’ from which others benefit, probably requires us to be more positive in our choices and actions than was then necessary.
The growing problem of poverty even in our relatively wealthy society means that harvest gifts are increasingly being passed on to local food banks, helped by the fact that many of our harvest contributions are now in tins or packets.
God’s instruction not to cut the edges is as relevant today as it was when He gave it to the Children of Israel. It is a reminder that, as He cares for us, we are to be part of His caring for others. Our harvest gifts, and the contributions we can make at other times to the food banks, often run by churches as part of the ongoing work of the Lord, are the same as then. However limited our donations may be, they are gifts from those who have enough to ‘harvest’ to those who have little or nothing of their own to gather.
In difficult economic times, it is easy to want to ‘cut to the edges.’ Because He cares for everyone, the Lord asks us to keep up His caring. So, in His name, don’t cut to the edges.








