 |

A missions parable about lost people: putting world
evangelism statistics in perspective.
Perspective is everything! Sometimes we can’t
see what’s happening in the world because of
our focus. Jesus told His disciples after having blessed
the woman at the well with “living water” that
they needed to “lift up their eyes” and
SEE the harvest! The following is a parable that gives
us a new way of looking at the world in which we live.
We have an incredible opportunity. What we need are
workers and resources to reap the harvest that Jesus
called “ready”!
Once upon a time there was
an apple grower who had acres and acres of apple trees.
In all, he had 10,000 acres of apple orchards.
One day he went to the nearby town. There, he hired
1,000 apple pickers. He told them:
"Go to my orchards. Harvest the ripe apples, and build storage
buildings for them so that they will not spoil. I need to be gone for a while,
but I will provide all you will need to complete the task. When I return, I
will reward you for your work.
"I'll set up a Society for the Picking
of Apples. The Society -- to which you will all belong -- will be responsible
for the entire operation. Naturally, in addition to those of you doing the
actual harvesting, some will carry supplies, others will care for the physical
needs of the group, and still others will have administrative responsibilities."
As he set up the Society structure, some people volunteered
to be pickers and others to be packers. Others put their skills to work as
truck drivers, cooks, accountants, storehouse builders, apple inspectors and
even administrators. Every one of his workers could, of course, have picked
apples. In the end, however, only 100 of the 1,000 employees wound up as full-time
pickers.
The 100 pickers started harvesting immediately. Ninety-four
of them began picking around the homestead. The remaining
six looked out toward the horizon. They decided to
head out to the far-away orchards.
Before long, the storehouses in the 800 acres immediately
surrounding the homestead had been filled by the 94
pickers with beautiful, delicious apples.
The orchards on the 800 acres around the homestead
had thousands of apple trees. But with almost all of
the pickers concentrating on them, those trees were soon picked nearly bare.
In fact, the ninety-four apple pickers working around the homestead began having
difficulty finding trees which had not been picked.
As the apple picking slowed down around the homestead,
Society members began channeling effort into building
larger storehouses and developing better equipment for picking and packing. They
even started some schools to train prospective apple pickers to replace those
who one day would be too old to pick apples.
Sadly, those ninety-four pickers working around the
homestead began fighting among themselves. Incredible
as it may sound, some began stealing apples that had already been picked. Although
there were enough trees on the 10,000 acres to keep every available worker busy,
those working nearest the homestead failed to move into un-harvested areas. They
just kept working those 800 acres nearest the house. Some on the northern edge
sent their trucks to get apples on the southern side. And those on the south
side sent their trucks to gather on the east side.
Even with all that activity, the harvest on the remaining
9,200 acres was left to just six pickers. Those six
were, of course, far too few to gather all the ripe fruit in those thousands
of acres. So, by the hundreds of thousands, apples rotted on the trees and fell
to the ground.
One of the students at the apple-picking school showed
a special talent for picking apples quickly and effectively.
When he heard about the thousands of acres of untouched faraway orchards, he
started talking about going there.
His friends discouraged him. They said: "Your
talents and abilities make you very valuable around the homestead. You'd
be wasting your talents out there. Your gifts can help us harvest apples from
the trees on our central 800 acres more rapidly. That will give us more time
to build bigger and better storehouses. Perhaps you could even help us devise
better ways to use our big storehouses since we have wound up with more space
than we need for the present crop of apples."
With
so many workers and so few trees, the pickers and packers
and truck drivers -- and all the rest of the Society
for the Picking of Apples living around the homestead
-- had time for more than just picking apples.
They built nice houses and raised their standard of
living. Some became very conscious of clothing styles.
Thus, when the six pickers from the far-off orchards returned to the homestead
for a visit, it was apparent that they were not keeping up with the styles in
vogue with the other apple pickers and packers.
To be sure, those on the homestead were always good
to those six who worked in the far away orchards. When
any of those six returned from the far away fields, they were given the red carpet
treatment. Nonetheless, those six pickers were saddened that the Society of the
Picking of Apples spent 96 percent of its budget for bigger and better apple-picking
methods and equipment and personnel for the 800 acres around the homestead while
it spent only 4 percent of its budget on all those distant orchards.
To be sure, those six pickers knew that an apple is
an apple wherever it may be picked. They knew that
the apples around the homestead were just as important as apples far away. Still,
they could not erase from their minds the sight of thousands of trees which had
never been touched by a picker.
They longed for more pickers to come help them. They
longed for help from packers, truck drivers, supervisors,
equipment-maintenance men, and ladder builders. They wondered if the professionals
working back around the homestead could teach them better apple-picking methods
so that, out where they worked, fewer apples would rot and fall to the ground.
Those
six sometimes wondered to themselves whether or not
the Society for the Picking of Apples was doing what the orchard owner had
asked it to do.
While one might question whether the Society was doing
all the owner wanted done, the members did keep very
busy. Several members were convinced that proper apple picking requires nothing
less than the very best equipment. Thus, the Society assigned several members
to develop bigger and better ladders as well as nicer boxes to store apples.
The Society also prided itself at having raised the qualification level for full-time
apple pickers.
When the owner returns, the Society members will crowd
around him. They'll proudly show off the bigger and
better ladders they've built and the nice apple boxes they've designed and made.
One wonders how happy that owner will be, however, when he looks out and sees
the acres and acres of untouched trees with their unpicked apples.
Original
version appeared in Let's Quit Kidding Ourselves About
Missions, Moody Press. © 1979
by The Moody Bible Institute.
Edited and revised by
Howard Culbertson.
|
 |