The SEED and the SOIL
In the parable of the seed and the soil Jesus said this:
a sower went out to sow.
And as he sowed, some seed fell by the wayside…
Some fell on stony places…
some fell among thorns…
but others fell on good ground and yielded a crop…
He who has ears to hear, let him hear!
(Matthew 13:3-9)
Jesus was using this as an example of how the message of the Gospel can be received by different persons and under different circumstances. Now, the seed referred to here is the Word of God and the good news it implies. And it can be heard by those who
constitute the wayside
(Matthew 13:4)
and are not receptive to or understand the Word when it is presented to them. And the more it is presented, the harder their hearts become against it.
Still others represent
the stony places
(Matthew 13:5)
and are initially enraptured by what the word implies but soon turn cold toward it; especially when trials or tribulation develop. Their reception of the Word comes quickly but dissipates just as fast.
There are those who receive the Word and hold on to it but their problems in dealing with other aspects of their lives soon overshadows the message of the Word. As a result, the Word ends up fighting for survival
among the thorns
(Matthew 13:7)
of this world but soon the problems of life and of living choke out the apparent benefits of what the Word states and so the cares of this life and the lure of materialism tends to win out.
Finally,
there is good ground
(Matthew 13:8)
in which the word of God continues to be received and can eventually bring forth the fruit and benefits that it was intended to do.
In each case, the sower remained the same; what changed was the “soil” unto which the seed fell so that, the soil, should be the only variable in the parable. This was probably the case when Christ first gave the story. But is it still the same today? Has the Word of God, as presented today, remained the uncorrupted seed that it once was; or has it, and the message been altered to an extent that makes the pure Word of God essentially unavailable? If the seed that is being given is tainted in some way then it is unlikely to bear much fruit, even if that seed does land on good ground. If we want good crops then we must plant good seed.
When one looks at the various ways that the initial Word of God has been modified, adapted, and altered in so many ways by present day proponents of the Gospel, is it any wonder why the present day seems to be bring forth such mediocre results? The initial church preached essentially one message:
we preach Christ crucified,
to the Jews a stumbling block
and to the Greeks foolishness…
(1 Corinthians 1:23)
At present, it sometimes seems that what is preached and has been adopted is more like a stumbling block and more like foolishness than what should be delivered by a pure and undefiled seed. Only a true seed can bring forth good crops.
And that is something to really think about.
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