Sermon on Matthew13:24-30, 36-43
Pastor Jennifer Garcia
This is an unsettling parable, with its “furnace of fire” and “weeping and gnashing of teeth.” It’s easy tosee only fire and brimstone in it.
To see “us, the wheat” vs. “them, the weeds.”
Or to worry: what if I’m a weed? Maybe I’m not good enough for the kingdom of heaven.
It’s easy to come to some troubling conclusions looking at this parable. Jesus’ explanation is a bit graphic, but let’s remember that it’s had two thousand years of people using that imagery to make people afraid and obedient. There can be other ways to read it and other things to get out of it.
This parable isn’t about making people fear Hell or to let “righteous” people feel satisfaction at “those evildoers” who are going to get punished.
Jesus was saying pretty much the opposite: stop worrying so much about sorting out “us versus them,” and instead trust God to sort it out in God’s time.We have a God full of grace—we can’t earn God’s love, and God loves us as we are, regardless of the ways we fall short.
So instead of fixating on the scary parts of this parable, let’s try to find what’s life-giving. I see three important things we can take from this parable.
The first is: don’t judge others.
“Let both of them grow together until the harvest,” says the landowner. Only at harvest time will everything be sorted out. We should focus on what’s happening now, not distressing ourselves over the future or judging and categorizing each other.
We shouldn’t presume to uproot the weeds—that’s the reapers’ job. And that job will only happen at the harvest—in God’s appointed time.
But that doesn’t mean we shouldn’t hold each other and ourselves accountable for our actions. When people abuse each other or wreak violence on each other, they—we—need to be held accountable, especially when the wrongdoer has more power (either explicit or implicit power) over the person or people they’ve harmed.
But ultimately, God’s the one who will sort things out in God’s time. And if we try to sort things out ourselves in our time, there’ll be no one left. Because there are weeds and wheat in each of our lives, in each of our hearts. That’s human nature. As Martin Luther put it, we’re simultaneously saints and sinners. We can’t separate the weeds from the wheat. And thankfully, we don’t have to.
I’ve been thinking about this truth about human nature a lot lately. Between my trip to the DC area last month and Independence Day, I’ve been having the musical Hamilton stuck in my head. It illustrates the complicated nature of human beings really well.
It’s inspired by the life of founding father Alexander Hamilton, and it’s narrated in large part by Aaron Burr, who killed Hamilton in a duel.
It could very easily paint Hamilton as the untainted hero of the story and cast Burr as the villain, but it doesn’t. It gives Hamilton credit for starting with nothing and through hard work and talent accomplishing great things and shaping this nation’s finances and government.
It also shows Hamilton’s thirst for influence and power. It shows him having an affair with a married woman while his own wife was away on vacation without him. He was so driven by his work that he sacrificed his health and family for it. It shows him preparing his son for a duel that would kill him.
And it shows Burr as just as ambitious, but also cautious and calculating. He also has an affair with a married woman, but it also shows Burr as a devoted spouse and parent. Often, Burr comes across as wiser than Hamilton—not subject to Hamilton’s fiery temper and rashness. But ultimately, Burr succumbs to jealousy and wounded pride. He challenges Hamilton to a duel and kills him. Afterwards, Burr laments that “the world was wide enough for both Hamilton and me.”
A show that could easily label Hamilton wheat and Burr a weed portrays them both as more complicated than that. They’re brilliant, talented, and dedicated people who also have flaws and hurt others. They’re both weeds and wheat. They’re human. Just like us.
Our parable today reminds us that we each have weeds and wheat within us. So, don’t judge others. Let them be complicated human beings, just like you.
A second lesson we can take from this parable is that the kingdom of heaven is growing.
It’s easy to focus on the end of the parable and forget what’s happening between the planting and the harvesting. But if we take a closer look at some of the context of this chapter, a theme of growth becomes more obvious.
This reading is made up of two chunks, and we skipped reading the two parables that come in between those chunks, because it’s scheduled for next week’s reading. So, we get the parable of the wheat and the weeds and then we get the disciples asking Jesus for an explanation.
The two parables that come in between are:
1. The parable of the mustard seed, which compares the kingdom of heaven to a tiny mustard seed that grows up to be big enough that birds seek shelter in it.
2. And the parable of the yeast, which compares the kingdom of heaven to yeast that makes dough rise. On my rare attempts at breadmaking, I’m always amazed to see how the dough doubles or triples in size as the yeast does its work.
Both of these parables have to do with growth, specifically the growth of the kingdom of heaven.
Today’s reading bookends these two parables about growth. And the parable of the wheat and the weeds, indeed, has to do with growth: the wheat still grows, despite the weeds. The harvest still arrives. The weeds don’t choke the wheat. There’s growth until the appointed time.
Jesus is giving the disciples and the crowds hope that God’s good news will spread, will grow. Beloved Community will continue to grow, despite the evil in the world and in our hearts.
Similarly, Hamilton and Burr’s legacieslive on despite their flaws and failings. Both Hamilton and Burr struggle to be remembered for their contributions. Both fall short of their ambitions: neither becomes president, Hamilton’s life is cut short, Burr is remembered for being the one who ended it. Still, each had a role in the development of this nation, and the good growth continued despite their shortcomings.
Legacy is one of the major themes in the show, and a recurring line is: “You have no control / who lives, who dies, who tells your story.” George Washington gives this advice to Hamilton as he sees Hamilton’s thirst to leave a mark on the world. Hamilton could do his best, but as he steps into the public eye, there are things outside his control that could affect his legacy.
That leads me to the third thing this parable tells us: we do know who tells our story.
God tells our story. And not only that, but God is in control of the story. And we know how the story ends—it’s going to be a happy ending.
Right now, we have both weeds and wheat within us. There’s evil in the world—it can be overwhelming. There’s evil in our own hearts. Sometimes it’s hard to find hope in the middle of all the weeds in this world.
But this parable promises that what’s evil and wrong in this world will no longer be. What’s right about the world and what’s right within us will shine like the sun. The Reign of God will be complete in God’s time.
Until then, we don’t need to divide ourselves into weeds and wheat—God will sort things out at the right time. For now, the world is wide enough for both weeds and wheat.
The Reign of God will continue to grow, and we get to be a part of it.
It’ll continue to grow until harvest time, when it’ll be complete.
And always, we rely on God’s grace. We’re saved by Christ’s death and resurrection, not by anything we do to make ourselves more like wheat and less like a weed. God’s got this—nothing can separate us from God.
If you ever feel like a weed or if the weeds of this world get you down, remember who tells your story. And know that the ending will shine like the sun.