The Parable of the Sower (July 21, 2002)
University Congregational Church—Wichita, Kansas
Rev. Gary Cox
Today’s Bible passage is one of the better-known
parables of Jesus. Before I read the
parable to you, I want to say a few things about parables themselves. It is an oversimplification to say that a
parable is a short story. It is that,
but it is much more.
It is clear that parables were Jesus’ favorite way of
teaching. There have been other
teachers who used parables as a teaching tool. But Jesus gave the parable a new
twist. The traditional way to
use a parable was to make it a sort of analogy that drove home a moral
point. The traditional parable is an
allegory, where everything in the parable represents something else. When a person hears the parable, they sort
of say, “Oh, I get it. The sower is God
and the seed is the word of God and the soil is the person who hears the word
of God.”
The early church interpreted many of the parables of
Jesus that way, including the one we will examine this morning. But there is now general agreement among
scholars that Jesus intended for his parables to go much deeper than direct
allegories. In fact, it seems that
Jesus did not use parables to drive home simplistic moral points; rather, he
used parables to disturb the listener.
He used parables to shake up our assumptions about the world, and to
make us re-think what’s right and what’s wrong, and who’s in and who’s out with
regard to God’s grace and love.
It can be difficult to go back and hear a parable as
if we’d never heard it before, but I can still remember the first time I read
many of the parables, and I frequently came away scratching my head. For example, when I first read the parable
of the talents, I thought to myself, “No!
That’s not right! Somebody
obviously messed up Jesus’ story! He
wouldn’t have told it like that!”
If you’ll remember, the parable of the talents has a
rich man leaving on a journey, and he trusts some of his slaves with part of
his wealth. A talent was an amount of
money. It was a great deal of
money. In fact, a talent was an amount
of money equal to about 15 years of a laborer’s wages. So to put the story in perspective, based on
today’s minimum wage, a talent would be equal to something approaching
200-thousand dollars.
So to tell the story in modern language, a rich man
goes on an extended vacation, and leaves one of his servants with a million
dollars, another servant with 400-thousand dollars, and a third servant with
200-thousand dollars. Well, both the
guy with the million dollars and the guy with 400-thousand dollars, quote,
“went off at once and traded with the money.”
In other words, they sort of play the market. The third servant—the one who only had two-thousand dollars
entrusted to him—buries the money so it will be safe when his boss gets back.
Okay, I admit I’m a pretty conservative guy when it
comes to such things, so I read this story and thought that the big boss was
going to be pretty upset with those two fellows who took a chance with his
money, and he’s going to give a big congratulatory hug to the servant who kept
his money safe.
Wrong! As it turns out, the guys who invested the money made
lots more money for their master—they doubled his money—and the boss gives them
a lot more responsibilities for being such good stewards of his cash. And the master turns to the third servant
and says, basically, “So, how did you do?”
And the servant says, “I was afraid of losing your money, so I hid
it.” And listen to what the rich man,
who if we draw a direct allegory, represents God, says:
You wicked and lazy
slave…Take the money from him, and give it to the one with ten talents. For to all those who have, more will be
given, and they will have an abundance; but from those who have nothing, even
what they have will be taken away. As
for this worthless slave, throw him into the outer darkness, where there will
be weeping and gnashing of teeth.
Ouch! Here I was aligning myself with the guy who
played it safe, and the next thing I know I’m being thrown into the outer
darkness where there is weeping and gnashing of teeth. I remember feeling like I’d been
sucker-punched when I first read this parable.
Since then I’ve managed to reinterpret the parable. As long as the money in the parable is in
some way representative of love, I can buy into it. We aren’t meant to hide our love. We’re meant to invest it in the world around us. Is that the way we are supposed to interpret
the parable? Who knows! That’s the whole point. The parables of Jesus are meant to stop us
in our tracks and make us think long and hard about the parable, and about the
world. There is never a, quote,
“correct” interpretation.
Many
modern scholars say that if you hear a parable and think to yourself, “Okay, I
get it. This stands for this and that
stands for that…” then you’ve missed the point. Jesus did not tell parables in the form of straight allegories,
where everything stands directly for something else. These scholars say that Jesus used parables to express truths
that simply cannot be stated except through parables. Furthermore, they say, the truth within
Jesus’ parables takes on different meanings in different situations. The truth of a parable of Jesus may mean one
thing to a person in first century Israel and something else to somebody in 21st
century America. It’s not that the
parables can mean anything a person wants them to. It’s just that the truth they carry fits in a meaningful way into
the world in which it is told.
If
you’re confused, good! You’re starting
to get it. So let’s take our state of
confusion, and listen to the parable from today’s Bible text. By the way, scholars often argue about what
Jesus actually said and what the writers of the gospels put in his mouth when
they wrote their accounts a couple of generations after his death. This particular parable is found, in one
version or another, in all three synoptic gospels—Matthew, Mark and Luke—and
also in the Gospel of Thomas, which is a list of Jesus’ sayings discovered in
the 20th century. Even the most
skeptical of scholars agree that Jesus really did tell a story about a sower
and his seed. I’ll read Matthew’s
version:
A farmer went out to
sow his seed. As he was scattering the
seed, some fell along the path, and the birds came and ate it up. Some fell on rocky places, where it did not
have much soil. It sprang up quickly,
because the soil was shallow. But when
the sun came up, the plants were scorched, and they withered because they had
no root. Other seed fell among thorns,
which grew up and choked the plants.
Still other seed fell on good soil, where it produced a crop—a hundred,
sixty, or thirty times what was sown.
He who has ears, let him hear.
Shortly
after this parable in the Gospel of Matthew, the author of Matthew has Jesus do
something that is completely out of character.
Jesus explains the meaning of the parable to the disciples. Now I will tell you something that I am free
to say from this pulpit, and which would get me fired from about 95% of the
churches in the world. You would be
hard pressed to find a reputable scholar who really thinks Jesus explained this
parable to his disciples. Matthew puts
these words in Jesus’ mouth. Matthew
turns this parable of Jesus into a direct allegory, where everything stands for
something else. Let’s look at what
Matthew has Jesus say to his disciples:
Listen to what the
parable of the sower means: When anyone hears the message about the kingdom and
does not understand it, the evil one comes and snatches away what was sown in
his heart. This is the seed along the
path. The one who received the seed
that fell on rocky places is the man who hears the word and at once receives it
with joy. But since he has no root, he
lasts only a short time. When trouble
or persecution comes because of the word, he quickly falls away. The one who received the seed that fell
among the thorns is the man who hears the word, but the worries of this life
and the deceitfulness of wealth choke it, making it unfruitful. But the one who received the seed that fell on
good soil is the man who hears the word and understands it. He produces a crop, yielding a hundred,
sixty, or thirty times what was sown.
Okay,
that is a direct allegorical interpretation of the parable. Is that the correct interpretation? Yes and no!
And this is the whole point about the parables of Jesus. That was the correct interpretation of the
parable for the community in which Matthew lived, a late first century community
of persecuted Christians. But that is
not necessarily the only meaning of the parable. Is that what Jesus intended the parable to mean to the people who
actually heard him tell it? Is the way
Matthew interpreted the parable the same way you and I must interpret it?
Matthew
is interpreting the parable in light of the good news about Jesus Christ, and
the kingdom of God that is made possible through Jesus Christ. That is a perfectly acceptable
interpretation. But is that what Jesus
had in mind when he originally told this story?
The
parable itself is pretty simple.
Somebody plants some seeds and a crop grows. The question implied in that story is a bit more difficult. The question is, “Who sows what, and what is
the crop that grows as a result?” I
think the whole key lies in determining the crop. For Matthew, and for Christians who have interpreted this parable
allegorically through the ages, the crop represents converts to
Christianity. A person hears about
Jesus, he or she accepts Jesus into their hearts, and then spreads the good
news about Jesus so that many new converts to the faith come about as a
result.
I
like that interpretation, and I believe it is a valid way of thinking about the
parable of the sower. That is the truth
it conveyed for Matthew’s community.
But is that the same truth is conveys to you and me? In a world where everybody we meet has
already heard the story of Jesus—where television and radio, books and movies
have made it impossible not to have some sort of knowledge of Jesus of Nazareth
and the various forms of Christianity built around him and his teachings—in
this modern world of ours, does this parable tell us to go out and try to
convert people to Christianity?
Perhaps! But maybe it says even more than that. Maybe if we can reclaim what this story
meant to the people who stood before Jesus of Nazareth as he first told the
story, then maybe, just maybe, we can plumb this parable for even deeper
meaning. Maybe this parable says
something more than simply, go forth and
make converts.
The
traditional interpretation seems to claim that the sower is Jesus, the seed is
the fact that Jesus is God’s Son and the world’s Savior, and the crop is new
converts to Christianity. So the
parable is about the significance of Jesus Christ, and the importance of what
Jesus Christ has done.
Again,
that is a perfectly acceptable and meaningful interpretation. But most scholars will insist Jesus did not
tell this parable about himself.
Instead, for Jesus, it was about God’s love and the way people respond
to that love. To state it as clearly as
possible, the parable was not about accepting Jesus as God’s Son and making
converts, but was instead about accepting God’s love and sharing it with
others.
The
crop that Jesus was talking about wasn’t converts. The crop was loving deeds, performed out of love for God and
neighbor. Is that the only meaning of
the parable? No! Going back to the nature of parables as told
by Jesus, there is truth within the parable that cannot be stated any other
way, and if we draw direct lines between the story and the world we’ve missed
the point. The parable is supposed to
work on us beneath the surface. The
story is supposed to make us a little uncomfortable, to make us question the
way we are looking at the world. The
parable is meant to almost subversively set some undercurrents moving just
beneath our consciousness, to draw us toward that place where Jesus keeps
pointing as he says we are close, so close, if only we had eyes to see and ears
to hear.
What
are some of the undercurrents we find beneath the surface of this parable of
the sower? There are many, and every
time we read the parable we are drawn deeper into the movements of those
currents. It seems to me that this
story is infused with the message that God is mysteriously and miraculously
bringing forth the harvest—the kingdom of God.
And the harvest is God’s doing.
The harvest is going to happen with or without us. The kingdom of God is unstoppable. And between the planting and the harvest a
lot of things are going to happen.
There will be all sorts of problems, but there is no need to get
discouraged, because in the end there will be a bountiful crop.
Another
undercurrent in this story is the idea that we have some role in determining
where we stand in relation to the kingdom.
It’s as if the rocky soil is rocky by choice, and the seed which sprouts
up around the thorns is there by its own choosing. No, the parable doesn’t say that, but why else would Jesus tell
the story? It is as if Jesus is saying,
the kingdom of God will happen with or
without you. You can’t bring it on by
yourself, and you can’t stop it no matter how hard you try. But you can be a part of it if you
want.
Of
course, there are bound to be countless other undercurrents bubbling beneath
the surface of this story. And you are
free to let those currents pull you in whatever direction they will. I meant it when I said there is absolutely
nothing wrong with interpreting this parable as a command to get out there in
the world and make converts to Christianity.
In fact, I still believe that’s a perfectly valid interpretation. Had Matthew interpreted it in some other
way, you and I might not be sitting in church this morning.
And
making converts is still important. The
question, for me at least, is how we go about that. Historically, it seems we Christians have decided the way to be a
part of the kingdom—the way to bring forth a bountiful crop—is to talk people into the kingdom.
Explain the faith to them. Tell
them all about Jesus, and perhaps most important, tell them what they need to believe about Jesus. That’s the
way to grow the kingdom.
But
I think Jesus may have had another idea.
We don’t talk people into the kingdom.
We love them into it. And people
will know the seed has taken root in us not by the words that come from our
mouths, but rather by the love that flows from our hearts.
The
Kingdom of God is happening—with us or without us. May our hearts be rich soil for God’s love, and may our lives
produce a bountiful crop.