Mark 4:1-20
Jesus began to teach by the lakeside, but such a huge
crowd gathered round him that he got into a boat on the lake and sat there. The
people were all along the shore, at the water’s edge. He taught them many things
in parables, and in the course of his teaching he said to them, ‘Listen!,
Imagine a sower going out to sow. Now it happened that, as he sowed, some of
the seed fell on the edge of the path, and the birds came and ate it up. Some
seed fell on rocky ground where it found little soil and sprang up
straightaway, because there was no depth of earth; and when the sun came up it
was scorched and, not having any roots, it withered away. Some seed fell into
thorns, and the thorns grew up and choked it, and it produced no crop. And some
seeds fell into rich soil and, growing tall and strong, produced crop; and
yielded thirty, sixty, even a hundredfold.’ And he said, ‘Listen, anyone who
has ears to hear!’
When he was alone, the Twelve, together with the others who
formed his company, asked what the parables meant. He told them, ‘The secret of
the kingdom of God is given to you, but to those who are outside everything
comes in parables, so that they may see and see again, but not perceive; may
hear and hear again, but not understand; otherwise they might be converted and
be forgiven.’
He said to them, ‘Do you not understand this parable?
Then how will you understand any of the parables? What the sower is sowing is
the word. Those on the edge of the path where the word is sown are people who
have no sooner heard it than Satan comes and carries away the word that was
sown in them. Similarly, those who receive the seed on patches of rock are
people who, when first they hear the word, welcome it at once with joy. But they
have no root in them, they do not last; should some trial come, or some
persecution on account of the word, they fall away at once. Then there are
others who receive the seed in thorns. These have heard the word, but the
worries of this world, the lure of riches and all the other passions come in to
choke the word, and so it produces nothing. And there are those who have
received the seed in rich soil: they hear the word and accept it and yield a
harvest, thirty and sixty and a hundredfold.’
Food for thought!
In today’s gospel reading we see Jesus making a new
departure. He is no longer teaching in the synagogue; he is now teaching by the
lakeside. He had made the orthodox approach to the people; now he has to take
unusual methods.
We do well to note that Jesus was prepared to use new
methods. He was willing to take religious preaching and teaching out of its
conventional setting in the synagogue into the open air and among the crowds of
ordinary men and women. There must have been many amongst the orthodox Jews who
criticized this departure; but Jesus was wise enough to know when new methods
were necessary and adventurous enough to use them. It would be well if his
church was equally wise and equally adventurous to try new methods and ways of
reaching out to the people, especially reaching out to the non-church goers.
Look at what Jesus did. The scene is the lakeside; Jesus
is sitting in the boat just off the shore. The shore shelves gently down to the
water's edge, and makes a natural amphitheatre for the crowd.
This new setting needed a new method; and the new method
Jesus chose was to speak to the people in parables. A parable is literally a
comparison. It is an earthly story with a heavenly meaning. Something on earth
is compared with something in heaven, that the heavenly truth may be better
grasped in light of the earthly illustration. Jesus started from the here and
now to get to the there and then. He started from a thing that was happening at
that moment on earth in order to lead men's thoughts to heaven; he started from
something which all men could see to get to the things that are invisible; he
started from something which all men knew to get to something which they had
never as yet realized.
By so doing Jesus showed that there is a close relationship
between earth and heaven. What Jesus is teaching them and us is to see the hand
of God in the regular and the normal; in the rising of the sun and the falling
of the rain and the growth of the plant. Long ago Paul had the same idea when
he said that the visible world is designed to make known the invisible things
of God (Rom.1:20). For Jesus, this world’s events and happenings are not
meaningless; they are all very meaningful. The things that happen in your
personal life, your family, your place of work, your church, are all parables
calling for your understanding.
"He said to them, ‘Do you not understand this
parable?" Do you?
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