Sowing, Growing,
Reaping
a sermon based on Mark 4:26-34
by Rev. Randy Quinn
Jesus used
parables and stories to tell about and explain the Kingdom of God. He used
many, many parables, only some of which are recorded in the gospels.
These are only
two of them.
No one parable
is complete in its comparison, yet each has a significant thing to say
about the Kingdom of God.
I think that
Jesus used parables because of the limitations of language. There is
no way to accurately describe God, nor can we expect to describe God's
Realm. Jesus instead tries to help us understand it with pictures and
stories that focus on one aspect or another of the Kingdom of God.
So let's look at
these parables and see what we can learn and discern about God's
Realm.
The first thing
I notice is that this is not about farming. Too often, I think people
want the Bible to be something that it isn't. It isn't intended to
teach us about horticulture or biology. This parable doesn't pretend
to be about good gardening techniques.
The farmer in
this story doesn't even plow. The farmer has no concern about the
weather or about weeds. Unlike any farmer I've ever known, this
farmer simply sits back and watches.
You've all
probably heard about the gardener who had a beautiful garden.
Everything was neat, every plant seemed to add to the overall beauty.
One day a man came by as the gardener was tending his garden. The man
commented about how wonderful God is that he could make such a
beautiful garden, to which the gardener responded, "yea, but you
should have seen it before I started helping."
Clearly, this
parable is not about farming or gardening. It's about the seed, the
seed that miraculously grows, the seed that becomes something very
different than when it was planted.
Jesus is saying
that the Kingdom of God is like a seed.
My own
understanding of the Kingdom of God is that it happens on at least
four different levels. It's not a place as much as it is an attitude,
an event that happens, an environment. It's what waits us beyond the
grave, it's within our hearts, it's a possibility for the world, and
it's acted out and modeled within the church. There are probably
other expressions and experiences of the Kingdom of God, but it's been
helpful for me to think of it in terms of a multi-layered, polyvalent
concept.
In another
parable, Jesus says that the Kingdom of God is like a seed that must
die and be buried for it to have new life (Jn 12:24). Clearly this is
an aspect of the Realm of God. There is hope and promise in the fact
that when we die, we are buried and begin a new life that is far
different from the one we have known.
It happens
without our help, too. It remains a mystery because none of us here
have experienced it. Like seeds ready for planting, we cannot know
where or when we will be planted, nor can we fully understand what we
will be like after we take on new life in the heavenly Kingdom of God.
In the
allegorical tale, Hind's Feet on High Places, Hannah Hurnard
tells the tale of a young shepherd named Much-Afraid who wants to
become like the great shepherd. Early in the story, a seed is planted
within Much-Afraid's heart that eventually grows to the point that
the heart is reshaped, redefined, and the young shepherd takes on a
new name.
I first read the
story almost 20 years ago, and perhaps it's because of that story that
I began to think of the Kingdom of God as something that happens to
and happens within our hearts.
In the fall, we
met with Melissa's teachers and therapists at SPARC. We set some
learning goals for her and began to work towards those goals. On any
given day, I saw very little if any progress towards those goals.
Now, however, at the end of the year, we are amazed at her progress.
Slowly but surely, she has grown, developed, and matured.
I like to
believe that the Kingdom of God also comes to life in our world in the
same way. Paul's assurance that every knee will bow, and every tongue
confess that Jesus Christ is Lord (Phil 2:10-11) suggests to me that
he, too, sees the Kingdom of God as something real, concrete, and
happening in the world around us.
In front of the
Parsonage, there are some mums planted. When we moved here two years
ago, they were in full bloom. By the following spring, I couldn't
remember what it was, but I did know that it was large and bushy. I
waited and watched daily for something to begin growing.
Slowly but
surely, a plant appeared and grew. And then suddenly, I realized that
it was in full bloom again. This year I've watched them form again.
And even though I know what to expect, it seems as though it's slow
starting, then suddenly, it's in full bloom.
Like a seed
planted in the world, God's kingdom grows and changes over time,
becoming very different than when it was first proclaimed. Often, it
grows so slowly that we don't even notice until it has blossomed into
full bloom.
Two dramatic
illustrations of how that happens are the eradication of small pox
from the earth, a feat that is still hard for me to comprehend. Yet,
one-by-one, people were inoculated until there were no more cases of
the disease anywhere in the world. Twenty years later, no one is
being vaccinated against it because it is simply gone.
The other is the
slow but steady progress of the health community in their campaign
against tobacco and its use in our society. Whether you agree with
them or not, whether you are a smoker or not, you have to admit that
the change has been dramatic. I watched the films from D-Day last
week and couldn't help but notice the number of people who were
smoking. Today, it's an entirely different world.
Like a seed, the
Kingdom of God happens around us every day. When we pray the Lord's
prayer, we are asking for that, whether we think about it or not:
"thy Kingdom come . . . on earth as it is in heaven" (Mt 6:10). And
if the health community can change the nature of our society, so can
we.
That's why I
also see the church as a model of what the Kingdom is or can be. We
are the bearers of the seed that Jesus sowed. We are witnesses of the
miracle of growth and fruitfulness. We proclaim in word and deed that
the power of God can and does transform us into a new thing, a new
creation.
We can begin by
teaching our children new ways to respond to the world around us. We
can begin by setting priorities in our own lives that reflect the love
and grace of God that we have known in and through Jesus Christ. We can
nurture these values in each other. And we can celebrate the harvest
when it comes.
That's what these
parables are about.
Perhaps there are
other metaphors for the Kingdom of God that are more appropriate for you
than a seed. Jesus uses many parables to help us identify and
understand the Kingdom of God in our own lives. Other parables may be
used to explain and understand the seed parables. Two of them may be
child birth or raising a child.
Like an embryo,
life takes many forms and shapes before it becomes a fully developed,
breathing, living baby. The changes are slow. The changes are hidden.
But they are none-the-less very real.
Children grow,
too. Everyday there is growth and change. Sometimes it's too little to
perceive, but I know that every school year I needed new clothes as I
was growing up because I had changed from one size to another.
And I know that as
I grew up, my parents began to relate to me differently. You don't
speak to a teenager the same way that you do to a toddler -- at least
not very effectively -- even if it is the same child.
The Kingdom of God
happens. It is mysterious, it is powerful, it's wonderful. But it's
not our kingdom, it's God's. God alone decides how, where, and when the
Kingdom is revealed. Our task is to find appropriate ways to respond to
it -- in our church, in our world, in our hearts, and as we prepare for
life beyond death.
The Kingdom of God
is one that is still in the process of sowing, growing, and reaping.
Sometimes all at the same time. And sometimes by slow but steady
progress.
Amen.
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