Sermon on Matthew 13:1-9, 18-23
Pastor Jennifer Garcia
Focus:Just as the sower sowed seeds all over the place, we can trust that good news can be found all around us and join in tending the soil.
Function:This sermon will encourage hearers to look for good news wherever they go.
By the time of our Gospel reading, it seems that Jesus was getting popular. So many people came to hear him speak that he got into a boat so he could address everyone on the beach.
It might seem like Jesus had arrived—if it were happening today, he would probably have paparazzi following him around.
But just as it tends to happen today, when someone gets a big enough audience, they also get a lot of pushback.
As we talked about last week, people who had been complaining that John the Baptist was a party pooper were now giving Jesus the side-eye for being a party animal.
Then, some religious leaders were upset because Jesus’ disciples picked themselves a snack on the Sabbath and then Jesus healed a man also on the Sabbath. And they weren’t just complaining about that behavior—they started to plot his downfall. They started spreading the idea that Jesus was acting through the power of demons.
Right before our reading, Jesus was talking to some crowds, and his family members were waiting outside to speak with him. He then asked the messenger, “’Who is my mother, and who are my brothers?’ And pointing to his disciples, he said, ‘Here are my mother and my brothers! For whoever does the will of my Father in heaven is my brother and sister and mother.’”
We don’t know what his family wanted to talk to him about. Maybe they wanted him to stop saying things that would get him in trouble or reflect badly on them. Maybe they wanted special treatment. Maybe they just wanted to say hi. But it can’t have been easy for them to hear what Jesus said. Jesus wasn’t just making enemies of some religious leaders—he was saying things that were hard to hear even for his own loved ones.
Right after that, our reading begins with Jesus leaving the house and sitting by the sea, and then getting into a boat to address the huge crowds in parables.
Jesus was popular but also getting negative attention.
This parable of the sower was the first in a series of parables, which we’ll be looking at for the rest of July. The rest of them are explicitly about the “kingdom of heaven,” and this one is about how that message is received.
It’s like Jesus was explaining to everyone why he was receiving pushback:
· Some people just wouldn’t understand,
· some would give up at the first sign of trouble,
· some would get distracted by the practicalities of daily life,
· but some would embrace the kingdom of heaven
For the crowds, it was enough to know to expect these reactions—why they were so moved by Jesus’ teachings and others were hostile.
But then, Jesus went deeper with his closest disciples.They came to him asking about parables, and Jesus explained to them the parable of the sower.
Where the crowds could rest in the knowledge that Jesus’ message would be received differently, Jesus was inviting his disciples into a deeper message.
Yes, people would have different reactions, and also, Jesus’ disciples would bear fruit. This parable isn’t about sorting out the “chosen few” versus those who didn’t make the cut. It’s realistic that not everyone is going to be receptive, but those who aregrow into the ecosystem of the kingdom of heaven.
They embody the vision in Isaiah of “shalom,” God’s peace that goes far beyond lack of war.Humanity and creation will be in harmony—everything will dance with joy, what is prickly will become lush, and everything will be fruitful and nourishing.
Jesus gave the disciples the understanding they asked for so that they could not only recognize the different reactions to Jesus’ words but help create richer soil.
By living out the kingdom of heaven here on earth, they would participate in showing glimpses of what its fulfillment will look like. By following Jesus’ example and feeding the hungry, having compassion on the suffering, and creating a community of love, they would make earth a little more as it is in heaven. They would cocreate with God richer soil for the seeds to land on.
Without that invitation to discipleship, it’s easy to look at this parable and try to type ourselves.
Maybe weread it and pat ourselves on the back for showing up at church on Sundays.Maybe we even find ourselves judging “Christmas and Easter Christians” as one of the other soils.
We can find ourselves longing for the packed Sunday school rooms of the past and feeling some distress about the young families in our lives who don’t belong to a church.
It’s understandable to feel that grief and concern for people and congregations we love.
Or maybe we read the parable and judge ourselves harshly, wondering if we have truly weathered difficult circumstances or would wither if greater hardship came our way. Or we think of how much time we spend worrying about money and wonder if our faith is being choked by “the cares of this age and the lure of wealth.”
Now I love a good personality test, but the parable of the sowerisn’t about telling us where we were sown or what kind of soil we are.
If anything, I think we have the potential for any or all of these reactions to Jesus’ message throughout our lives.
Who among us hasn’t been perplexed by something in Scripture and felt like we’re just not getting it, as if we almost figured out something profound only to have it snatched away?
Who among us hasn’t heard an inspiring speaker or been caught up in the emotion of a beautiful hymn or worship song and felt like we would be different from now on, only to wake up the next morning and go about our business as usual?
Who among us hasn’t ever gotten caught up in the cares of this world or worried about money?
And finally, who among us hasn’t ever noticed God at work—whether something truly miraculous or simply being moved by a sunset or a tender act of friendship.
We have the potential for all of it on any given week.The point isn’t to categorize ourselves or others.
Since Jesus called it “the parable of the sower” in his explanation to his disciples, let’s remember that the sower sowed seed all over the place. He didn’t reserve the seeds only for the good soil. He threw handfuls everywhere.
We have a God of abundance and a Savior who wanted his message spread far and wide. The Good News is everywhere: that God loves this world God created, that God created each and every human being (including you!) in God’s image, that God is on the side of the suffering, powerless, and marginalized, that God loved us enough to become human and experience the fullness of the human experience, and that God will reconcile all things, bringing God’s shalom to the world.
When the conditions are right, these truths will root and grow. God’s word will not return empty but will water and nourish the earth.
We followers of Jesus get to notice that happening, and maybe God will use us to increase the good soil around us. Thanks be to God, we don’t have to be perfect—just do our best with the Holy Spirit’s help to be kind and generous and loving and honest, including about where we need God’s grace.
It may not make us popular, and it will likely bring about some pushback, but just as Jesus was dedicated to spreading his message of God’s shalom far and wide, we can help bring glimpses of that peace.
God’s peace be with you, wherever you go.