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The Two Harvesters

The Two Harvesters: Unveiling the Prophetic Distinction Between Barley and Wheat

The core of the biblical calendar is a seasonal, agricultural cycle that pivots on two distinct grain harvests. Understanding the sequence and the unique properties of these grains—barley and wheat—reveals a profound prophetic pattern concerning the spiritual harvest that culminates at The Lord’s Return.

The calendar does not feature one continuous harvest, but two separate agricultural events, each with its own spiritual signature.


Barley: The Firstfruits of Purity

The agricultural year begins in the early spring (the month of Abib/Nisan) with the Barley Harvest (Qatzir S’orim).

  • The Grain: Barley is the hardier, faster-growing grain. While less valued than wheat, its readiness signaled the start of the spiritual year and sustained the populace until the main harvest arrived.
  • The Offering: The barley harvest is consecrated by the Wave Sheaf (Omer) Offering (Leviticus 23:10), offered on the day after the Sabbath during the Feast of Unleavened Bread. This offering was to be presented as unleavened grain.

The barley, being the firstfruits and the offering directly tied to the Feast of Unleavened Bread, symbolized Christ’s resurrection—the pure, unleavened, and undefiled beginning of the spiritual harvest.


Wheat: The Full Harvest of Leaven

The secondary and main harvest follows seven weeks later, concluding with the Feast of Weeks, or Shavuot (Pentecost). This is the time of the Wheat Harvest (Qatzir Chittim), the slower-maturing, more valuable grain.

  • The Prophetic Contrast: The key detail is the offering commanded for Shavuot. The offering was not the pure, unleavened bread of the barley feast, but two loaves made from the new wheat flour that were explicitly baked with leaven (Leviticus 23:17).

This legal and practical distinction between the two harvests carries immense prophetic weight:

  1. Barley (Christ): The single, perfect, unleavened offering represents the Head of the Church, who is entirely without sin.
  2. Wheat (The Church): The two leavened loaves symbolize the full harvest of humanity—Jew and Gentile—gathered during the age of the Holy Spirit (Pentecost). Though redeemed and precious (wheat), the loaves contain leaven (a symbol of sin or imperfection), signifying that the Church remains an imperfect body until its final perfection and glorious transformation at the παρovσιˊα (Royal Return) of the Lord.

Defining the Spiritual Seasons

The prophetic calendar, therefore, is defined by this distinction. The barley harvest marks the beginning of the spiritual year with purity and resurrection, while the wheat harvest covers the subsequent age—a time of rich yield, yet still containing the leaven that must be purged. This agricultural reality grounds the spiritual mandate for the Church to remain effective salt in a world that threatens to strip away its preserving savor.