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July 2002 (click here to return to "July
2002 Sermons" page)
16th Sunday in Ordinary Time (July 21, 2002)
“Sow What?”
Van Kemper
Text: Matthew
13:24-30, 36-43
Sermon
Last Sunday, we saw God at work in the Parable of the Sower.
We learned that God’s kingdom is everywhere: along the path, on the
rocky ground, among the thorns, and even on the good soil.
The explanation offered by Jesus emphasized what ancient Hebrew prophets
like Isaiah had learned the hard way: The people might hear, but would not
understand; the people might see, but would not perceive; the people would not
repent, and be healed.
I concluded last week’s sermon by imagining a very weary God, tired of
laboring for eternity in the fields of the kingdom, yet unwilling to give up on
humanity. In my imagination, I
asked God the burning question, “Lord,
why do you continue to love us, especially when we are so unworthy?”
And an unexpected answer came back to me, when God
took
a deep breath and answered in a still small voice, “You sow and sow.” . . .
God keeps sowing, keeps after us, keeps showing us how to deal with adversity,
keeps providing us with more opportunities to blossom.
God did not just create the world and then turn away.
Now, this morning’s lectionary reading brings us another parable of the
kingdom. This time, Jesus tells the crowds that someone sows good seed
and then, while everybody is asleep, an enemy comes along and sows weeds among
the wheat, and then goes away. The
wheat grows, but so do the weeds. (In
fact, the weeds in this parable are particularly bothersome because they look
very much like the wheat they infest!) When
the servants finally see what is happening, they ask their master for permission
to pull out the weeds. But their
master says “No,” and then explains that, at harvest time, the reapers will
collect the weeds for burning while they gather the good grain into the
master’s barn.
If you gather nothing else from this parable, you surely will come away from it
with the opinion that Jesus was a much better carpenter than he was a farmer!
(pause) Even though I grew
up in the city of San Diego, California, I spent enough summers on my Granny’s
farm in southern Oklahoma to know that leaving weeds to grow in the fields until
harvest time is a very strange way to be successful at farming.
Every summer, I would be given a hoe bigger than I was – and pointed in
the direction of what seemed to me to be endless rows of cotton plants. Even if you’ve never chopped cotton – a misnomer is there
ever was one, since the idea is to miss the cotton and chop down the weeds! –
you still know that weeds need to be eliminated as soon as feasible.
Even if your agricultural activities have been limited to caring for a
lawn at your urban home, then you know that it helps to pull out or cut down the
weeds before they sprout their seeds and generate even more weeds.
What Jesus suggests in this parable seems to run counter to good agricultural
practices. Even though it does not
seem to follow the best practices for farmers, it still provides a guide for
best practices for saving the world – something at which Jesus really is the
expert. Jesus knows a lot about
love, mercy, righteousness, forgiveness, and patience – all the good stuff of
God’s kingdom.
We need to turn to Jesus’ explanation of this parable to make sense of it from
his perspective.
As with the earlier Parable of the Sower, this Parable of the Weeds of the Field
– as it is labeled by the disciples – receives an explanation that helps
only a little. Here the sower is
the Son of Man – whom the disciples and Christians ever since – take to be
Jesus himself. The field is the world, and the good seed are the children of the
kingdom, while the weeds are the children of the evil one.
The explanation then moves toward eschatology – the end of the world
– as the disciples hear that the enemy is the devil, the harvest is the end of
the age, and the reapers are angels.
This focus on the end of the age takes the explanation beyond the present time
of the disciples – and even beyond our own times.
For this reason, many commentators have concluded that this parable is
intended to preach patience among the faithful.
They should not rush to judgment about who and what is evil in the world
around them. And they should leave
the reaping and the separating of the weeds from the grains in the hands of the
Lord.
We also should notice what Jesus ignores in his explanation.
For instance, Jesus does not condemn the servants or the master for
failing to keep watch during the night instead of sleeping. If the master had posted a servant as guard over the fields,
then the enemy might not have been able to broadcast his weeds among the wheat.
So, this parable is not about some rare and intentional falling asleep at
the wheel or being inattentive, but instead emphasizes how such “sleep”
naturally and inevitably comes to “everybody.”
As to the servants’ eagerness to cull the weeds from the wheat, Jesus cautions
that we must be patient. It is not
up to us to do the reaping, for this is to be left in the hands of God, through
his messengers (angels). Jesus
explains that sin and evildoers will be dealt with, but not yet!
According to Jesus’ interpretation of this parable, it is not up to his
disciples to determine who is good and evil, much less to take into their own
hands any actions against sin and evildoers.
So,
just who is going to take responsibility for dealing with the weeds?
The
Anglo-Irish playwright and author Oscar Wilde (1854-1900) once observed that
Agitators are a set of interfering,
meddling people, who come down to some perfectly contented class of the
community and sow the seeds of discontent among them. That is the reason why agitators are so absolutely necessary.
Without them, in our incomplete state, there would be no advance toward
civilization (from “The Soul of Man under Socialism,” Fortnightly Review;
London, 1891).
Although Oscar Wilde was referring to late 19th century socialist agitators,
most of us here can see that this profile fits Jesus to a “T.”
Indeed, Jesus’ entire career as reported here in Matthew and in the
other Gospels is the story of an agitator, a man of social criticism and social
action. Jesus always was intefering,
meddling, upsetting the elite members of his community, and sowing the seeds of
discontent among the people. He was
well aware that he was pitting those who followed him against centuries of
tradition. He also understood that, from the perspective of the powers
and principalities, he and his followers were like weeds among the wheat in the
fields.
Here is the paradox in the parable, here is where Jesus throws his listeners the
inevitable curve: The Son of Man sows the good seed, but the good seed is at
times the seed of discontent, the stuff of agitating, interfering, and meddling.
It is not an accident that, in the parable, the “enemy” comes while
“everybody is asleep.” Being
“asleep” is another way for Jesus to express to the crowds the natural
tendency of human beings to become complacent, to the point that the people
“hear but never understand, see but never perceive.”
Especially when what we having been doing for years seems to be working,
it is very tempting to continue to do the same things season after season.
Eventually, the sameness of whatever approach we employ leads to
acceptance of the status quo as if it were the only way to do things.
In many congregations, this approach to doing church is celebrated
through what some call the Seven Last Words of the Church: “We’ve never done
it that way before.”
So, it is with great joy that I stand here to report that some new seeds are
beginning to be germinated here at Trinity. These seeds have not emerged yet and certainly have not borne
fruit yet. But, a new beginning is
upon us – and I want to let you have a sneak peek into this wonderful work.
If you have been reading The Trinity Caller, and hearing Wayne Davis stand up
and make announcements from time to time, then you are aware that we now have an
“Inclusive Ministry Task Force” working at the command of the Session. This
Task Force is working faithfully:
·
to expand our horizons in ministry as we move
ahead into this 21st century;
·
to discern how Trinity
can become more “inclusive” of the broader community outside these sanctuary
walls; and
·
to transform Trinity
into a “welcoming congregation” within our Oak Cliff neighborhood.
Many years ago, this congregation suffered through hard times.
The members’ faithful response to those crises led to reestablishment
of the facility in our present location and, eventually, to the construction and
renovation of this building in which we now hold our worship services and other
congregational activities. Without
their vision and commitment, we would not be in this sanctuary this morning and
every Sunday morning.
These days, even as our membership has declined from more than 200 to around 160
and worship attendance from around 100 to around 60, and even as we have just
closed on the sale of the former Wynnewood church facility, crisis and
opportunity are both in the air here at Trinity. The Inclusive Ministry Task Force understands the present
tension between crisis and opportunity. Next
month, the Task Force will send to the Session a series of recommendations –
and actions to match – that, if taken seriously and fully implemented, can
transform this congregation and its relationship with the surrounding community.
All of us will see the impact of these recommendations on who we are and how we
do church here at Trinity. Inevitably,
there will be some discontent. After all, most folks – and perhaps especially life-long
Presbyterians – are averse to change.
When you are urged to participate in our congregational transformation, remember
that the very future of Trinity Presbyterian church is on the line.
Many of you sitting in the pews this morning are thinking that any such
transformation will not matter, since you know that it is not going to change
the way you participate in Sunday morning worship services, in the women’s
circles, in First Thrusday and Fifth Sunday social gatherings, and even in the
numerous funerals that we can expect to attend in the coming months and years.
But let me remind you of a statement from Ella Wheeler Wilcox (1850-1919), an
American writer, journalist, and poet, who once remarked: “With every deed you
are sowing a seed, though the harvest you may not see.”
Some of us certainly will not see the results of the changes being
proposed by the Inclusive Ministry Task Force.
But all of us can be faithful to the message of Jesus, the ultimate
agitator who sowed the seeds of transformation in his own community some two
thousand years ago, and who provides our model for bringing about transformation
in our community here in Oak Cliff.
When you hear what is ahead for Trinity, don’t just turn away, believing that
it doesn’t matter what you do. Turning
around the situation here at Trinity will not occur overnight.
Each of us can become a good seed for change, if we will act positively
in answering the question “What can I do to transform Trinity into a
‘welcoming congregation?’” Nearly
thirty years of declining membership and resources can be turned around – but
only if we all commit ourselves to turn the uncaring apathy of “So what!”
into the missionary zeal of “Sow what?”
Amen.