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#5 Farmer, Seeds And Soil Series
Contributed by Robert Butler on Jul 26, 2021 (message contributor)
Summary: We must be will to cultivate our lives for Christ if we long to be His tools bringing about the advance of the kingdom of God
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This sermon was written and given by the leader of Mendingnets.org ministries on Sunday July 28, 2021 at The Center.
Let me start off by saying I’m the type of person who tells it like it is, so
parables drive me crazy!! Just speak in a straight line, Jesus. Cut to the
chase and get to the point! Ugh.
Needless to say, parables are not my favorite part of the bible. (So, this
should be an interesting teaching LOL) They make me think too hard and I
don’t want to deal with it. But what I have learned in my walk with God is:
First, the Bible is not about what I like or don’t like. Second, what makes
you “think too hard and not want to deal” is a red, hot, flaming sign that one
is to lean into the discomfort and dig a little deeper. Mathew 13 is about
a farmer sowing seed in his field. It’s a story that illustrates profound truths
about the condition of our hearts and our responsibility to share the gospel.
So, get your shovels out and let's get digging.
Why Does Jesus Talk In Parables?
I can image some of the disciples like Luke who are deep in thought but
short on words asking Jesus why He speaks in parables:
"He replied, 'Because the knowledge of the secrets of the kingdom of
heaven has been given to you, but not to them. Whoever has will be given
more, and they will have an abundance. Whoever does not have, even
what they have will be taken from them. This is why I speak to them in
parables:
"'Though seeing, they do not see;
though hearing, they do not hear or understand'" (Matthew 13:11–13
NIV)
Parables make the conceptual a little more
concretehttps://www.jesusfilm.org/blog-and-stories/parable-of-sower.html
Jesus’s ministry brought him to rural areas with mostly uneducated people
sharing truths about God’s kingdom. He wasn’t speaking to people who had
any interest in sitting around a coffee shop all day discussing doctoral
concepts—let alone the luxury of doing so.
By teaching with parables, Jesus was able to explain abstract ideas in a
way that people throughout Judea could relate to. Not only did this help
them make a connection between their everyday lives and spiritual truth,
but it also gave these truths sticking power. You know that they thought
about the parable of the sower during every planting season.
What does everything represent?
I sat down with a mentor to talk about the passage. I said, “I can’t relate to
this passage because once I heard the word I was full steam ahead for
Team Jesus with a double dose of the Holy Ghost!!!!
But as I began to do research on this parable and look into different
commentaries, I wasn’t cultivating seeds but eating humble pie. In Christ
Jesus making me new I forgot about my time BC. Before Christ was first in
my life. Forgot about my days wandering around the desert without fertile
land in sight.
When we're interpreting Jesus’ parables, it's easy to attach too much
meaning to every component of the story. The story itself is a metaphor, so
everything within it must be a symbol for something, right? That’s a surefire
recipe for getting off track and ending up getting off base. We want to make
sure that we’re getting Jesus’ point and not overdoing it.
Thankfully, Jesus interprets the parable of the sower for us. Some elements
He explains explicitly, and others are implied. Let's look at them:
What is the seed?
For a farmer, life is found in a little kernel of seed. Each seed contained the
raw materials for a transformational miracle. From a tiny seed, a life
sustaining plant, fruit bearing bush, or a giant tree can grow.
But as we see in this parable (and as every farmer understood), many
environmental factors determine how well a seed will thrive. If a seed is
unable to make its way into the healthy soil, it cannot flourish.
In this parable, the seed is the "message of the kingdom." And like all seed,
it cannot do its transformational work in the wrong environment. If the
gospel seed falls on the bad soil (or is snatched up before it can find
purchase), it just won’t sprout.
What is the soil?
Jesus makes it clear that the receptiveness of a human heart is
represented by the parable's various soils. The effectiveness of the
gospel's seed depends entirely on the soil where it lands, and the parable
of the sower is ultimately about how various people respond to the gospel.
1. The bird-pecked soil
When we think about planting seeds, we envision a farmer plowing up the
soil and then using a tool to insert the seed deep into the earth. While
plowing did happen in the first century, it wasn't the standard. Typically a