Verses 1-50
Chapter 13
Matthew 13:1-58 is a very important chapter in the pattern of the gospel.
(i) It shows a definite turning-point in the ministry of Jesus.
At the beginning of his ministry we find him teaching in the synagogues;
but now we find him teaching on the seashore. The change is very
significant. It was not that the door of the synagogue was as yet
finally shut to him, but it was closing. Even yet in the synagogue he
would find a welcome from the common people; but the official leaders of
Jewish orthodoxy were now in open opposition to him. When he entered a
synagogue now, it would not be to find only an eager crowd of listeners;
it would be also to find a bleak-eyed company of Scribes and Pharisees
and elders weighing and sifting every word to find a charge against him,
and watching every action to turn it into an accusation.
It is one of the supreme tragedies that Jesus was banished from
the Church of his day; but that could not stop him from bringing his
invitation to men; for when the doors of the synagogue were closed
against him, he took to the temple of the open air, and taught men in
the village streets, and on the roads, and by the lake-side, and in
their own homes. The man who has a real message to deliver, and a real
desire to deliver it, will always find a way of giving it to men.
(ii) The great interest of this chapter is that here we see
Jesus beginning to use to the full his characteristic method of teaching
in parables. Even before this he had used a way of teaching which had
the germ of the parable in it. The simile of the salt and the light (Matthew 5:13-16), the picture of the birds and the lilies (Matthew 6:26-30), the story of the wise and the foolish builder (Matthew 7:24-27), the illustration of the garments and the wine-skins (Matthew 9:16-17), the picture of the children playing in the market-place (Matthew 11:16-17) are all embryo parables. They are truth in pictures.
But it is in this chapter that we find Jesus' way of using
parables fully developed and at its most vivid. As someone has said,
"Whatever else is true of Jesus, it is certainly true that he was one of
the world's supreme masters of the short story." Before we begin to
study these parables in detail, let us ask why Jesus used this method
and what are the great teaching advantages which it offers.
(a) The parable always makes truth concrete. There are very few
people who can grasp and understand abstract ideas; most people think in
pictures. We could for long enough try to put into words what beauty
is, and at the end of it no one would be very much the wiser; but if we
can point at someone and say, "That is a beautiful person," no more
description is needed. We might try for long enough to define goodness
and in the end leave no clear idea of goodness in people's minds; but
everyone recognizes a good person and good deed when he sees them. In
order to be understood, every great word must become flesh, every great
idea must take form and shape in a person; and the first great quality
of a parable is that it makes truth into a picture which all men can see
and understand.
(b) It has been said that all great teaching begins from the
here and now in order to get to the there and then. If a man wishes to
teach people about things which they do not understand, he must begin
from things which they do understand. The parable begins with material
which every man understands because it is within his own experience, and
from that it leads him on to things which he does not understand, and
opens his eyes to things which he has faded to see. The parable opens a
man's mind and eyes by beginning from where he is and leading him on to
where he ought to be.
(c) The great teaching virtue of the parable is that it compels
interest. The surest way to interest people is to tell them stories. The
parable puts truth in the form of a story; the simplest definition of a
parable is in fact that it is "an earthly story with a heavenly
meaning." People will not listen, and their attention cannot be
retained, unless they are interested; with simple people it is stories
which awaken and maintain interest, and the parable is a story.
(d) The parable has the great virtue that it enables and compels
a man to discover truth for himself It does not do a man's thinking for
him; it says, "Here is a story. What is the truth in it? What does it
mean for you? Think it out for yourself".
There are some things which a man cannot be told; he must
discover them for himself. Walter Pater once said that you cannot tell a
man the truth; you can only put him into a position in which he can
discover it for himself. Unless we discover truth for ourselves, it
remains a second-hand and external thing; and further, unless we
discover truth for ourselves, we will almost certainly forget it
quickly. The parable, by compelling a man to draw his own conclusions
and to do his own thinking, at one and the same time makes truth real to
him and fixes it in his memory.
(e) The other side of that is that the parable conceals truth
from those who are either too lazy to think or too blinded by prejudice
to see. It puts the responsibility fairly and squarely on the
individual. It reveals truth to him who desires truth; it conceals truth
from him who does not wish to see the truth.
(f) One final thing must be remembered. The parable, as Jesus
used it, was spoken; it was not read. Its impact had to be immediate,
not the result of long study with commentaries and dictionaries. It made
truth flash upon a man as the lightning suddenly illuminates a
pitch-dark night. In our study of the parables that means two things for
us.
First, it means that we must amass every possible detail about
the background of life in Palestine, so that the parable will strike us
as it did those who heard it for the first time. We must think and study
and imagine ourselves back into the minds of those who were listening
to Jesus.
Second, it means that generally speaking a parable will have
only one point. A parable is not an allegory; an allegory is a story in
which every possible detail has an inner meaning; but an allegory has to
be read and studied; a parable is heard. We must be very careful not to
make allegories of the parables and to remember that they were designed
to make one stabbing truth flash out at a man the moment he heard it.
The Sower Went Out To Sow (Matthew 13:1-9; Matthew 13:18-23)
13:1-9,18-23 On
that day, when he had gone out from the house, Jesus sat on the
seashore; and such great crowds gathered to hear him that he went into a
boat, and sat there; and the whole crowd took their stand on the
seashore; and he spoke many things in parables to them. "Look!" he said,
"the sower went out to sow; and, as he sowed, some seed fell by the
wayside: and the birds came and devoured it. But some seed fell upon
stony ground, where it had not much earth; and, because it had no depth
of earth, it sprang up immediately; but when the sun rose it was
scorched, and it withered away because it had no root. Other seed fell
upon thorns, and the thorns came up, and choked the life out of it. But
others fell on good ground, and yielded fruit, some a hundredfold, some
sixtyfold, some thirtyfold. Who has ears, let him hear."
"Listen then to the
meaning of the parable of the sower. When anyone hears the word of the
kingdom, and does not understand it, the evil one comes, and snatches
away that which was sown in his heart. This is represented by the
picture of the seed which was sown by the wayside. The picture of the
seed which was sown on the stony ground represents the man who hears the
word, and immediately receives it with joy. But he has no root in
himself, and is at the mercy of the moment, and so, when affliction and
persecution come, because of the word, he at once stumbles. The picture
of the seed which is sown among the thorns represents the man who hears
the word, but the cares of this world and the seduction of riches choke
the word, and it bears no crop. The picture of the seed which was sown
on the good ground represents the man who hears the word and understands
it. He indeed bears fruit and produces some a hundredfold, some
sixtyfold, some thirtyfold."
Here is a picture which anyone in Palestine would understand.
Here we actually see Jesus using the here and now to get to the there
and then. There is a point which the Revised Standard Version obscures.
The Revised Standard Version has: "A sower went out to sow." The Greek
is not a sower, but: "The sower went out to sow."
What in all likelihood happened was that, as Jesus was using the
boat by the lakeside as a pulpit, in one of the fields near the shore a
sower was actually sowing, and Jesus took the sower, whom they could
all see, as a text, and began: "Look at the sower there sowing his seed
in that field!" Jesus began from something which at the moment they
could actually see to open their minds to truth which as yet they had
never seen.
In Palestine there were two ways of sowing seed. It could be
sown by the sower scattering it broadcast as he walked up and down the
field. Of course, if the wind was blowing, in that case some of the seed
would be caught by the wind and blown into all kinds of places, and
sometimes out of the field altogether. The second way was a lazy way,
but was not uncommonly used. It was to put a sack of seed on the back of
an ass, to tear or cut a hole in the corner of the sack, and then to
walk the animal up and down the field while the seed ran out. In such a
case some of the seed might well dribble out while the animal was
crossing the pathway and before it reached the field at all.
In Palestine the fields were in long narrow strips; and the
ground between the strips was always a right of way. It was used as a
common path; and therefore it was beaten as hard as a pavement by the
feet of countless passers-by. That is what Jesus means by the wayside.
If seed fell there, and some was bound to fall there in whatever way it
was sown, there was no more chance of its penetrating into the earth
than if it had fallen on the road.
The stony ground was not ground filled with stones; it was what
was common in Palestine, a thin skin of earth on top of an underlying
shelf of limestone rock. The earth might be only a very few inches deep
before the rock was reached. On such ground the seed would certainly
germinate; and it would germinate quickly, because the ground grew
speedily warm with the heat of the sun. But there was no depth of earth
and when it sent down its roots in search of nourishment and moisture,
it would meet only the rock, and would be starved to death, and quite
unable to withstand the heat of the sun.
The thorny ground was deceptive. When the sower was sowing, the
ground would look clean enough. It is easy to make a garden look clean
by simply turning it over; but in the ground still lay the fibrous roots
of the couch grass and the bishop weed and all the perennial pests,
ready to spring to life again. Every gardener knows that the weeds grow
with a speed and a strength that few good seeds can equal. The result
was that the good seed and the dormant weeds grew together; but the
weeds were so strong that they throttled the life out of the seed.
The good ground was deep and clean and soft; the seed could gain
an entry; it could find nourishment; it could grow unchecked; and in
the good ground it brought forth an abundant harvest.
The Word And The Hearer (Matthew 13:1-9; Matthew 13:18-23 Continued)
This parable is really aimed at two sets of people.
(a) It is aimed at the hearers of the word. It is fairly
frequently held by scholars that the interpretation of the parable in Matthew 13:18-23
is not the interpretation of Jesus himself, but the interpretation of
the preachers of the early Church, and that it is not in fact correct.
It is said that it transgresses the law that a parable is not an
allegory, and that it is too detailed to be grasped by listeners at
first hearing. If Jesus was really pointing at an actual sower sowing
seed, that does not seem a valid objection; and, in any event, the
interpretation which identifies the different kinds of soil with
different kinds of hearers has always held its place in the Church's
thought, and must surely have come from some authoritative source. If
so, why not from Jesus himself?
If we take the parable as a warning to hearers, it means that
there are different ways of accepting the word of God, and the fruit
which it produces depends on the heart of him who accepts it. The fate
of any spoken word depends on the hearer. As it has been said, "A jest's
prosperity lies not in the tongue of him who tells it, but in the ear
of him who hears it." A jest will succeed when it is told to a man who
has a sense of humour and is prepared to smile. A jest will fad when it
is told to a humourless creature or to a man grimly determined not to be
amused. Who then are the hearers described and warned in this parable?
(i) There is the hearer with the shut mind. There are people
into whose minds the word has no more chance of gaining entry than the
seed has of settling into the ground that has been beaten hard by many
feet. There are many things which can shut a man's mind. Prejudice can
make a man blind to everything he does not wish to see. The unteachable
spirit can erect a barrier which cannot easily be broken down. The
unteachable spirit can result from one of two things. It can be the
result of pride which does not know that it needs to know; and it can be
the result of the fear of new truth and the refusal to adventure on the
ways of thought. Sometimes an immoral character and a man's way of life
can shut his mind. There may be truth which condemns the things he
loves and which accuses the things he does; and many a man refuses to
listen to or to recognize the truth which condemns him, for there are
none so blind as those who deliberately will not see.
(ii) There is the hearer with the mind like the shallow ground.
He is the man who fails to think things out and think them through.
Some people are at the mercy of every new craze. They take a
thing up quickly and just as quickly drop it. They must always be in the
fashion. They begin some new hobby or begin to acquire some new
accomplishment with enthusiasm, but the thing becomes difficult and they
abandon it, or the enthusiasm wanes and they lay it aside. Some
people's lives are littered with things they began and never finished. A
man can be like that with the word. When he hears it he may be swept
off his feet with an emotional reaction; but no man can live on an
emotion. A man has a mind and it is a moral obligation to have an
intelligent faith. Christianity has its demands, and these demands must
be faced before it can be accepted. The Christian offer is not only a
privilege, it is also a responsibility. A sudden enthusiasm can always
so quickly become a dying fire.
(iii) There is the hearer who has so many interests in life that
often the most important things, get crowded out. It is characteristic
of modern life that it becomes increasingly crowded and increasingly
fast. A man becomes too busy to pray; he becomes so preoccupied with
many things that he forgets to study the word of God: he can become so
involved in committees and good works and charitable services that he
leaves himself no time for him from whom all love and service come. His
business can take such a grip of him that he is too tired to think of
anything else. It is not the things which are obviously bad which are
dangerous. It is the things which are good, for the "second best is
always the worst enemy of the best." It is not even that a man
deliberately banishes prayer and the Bible and the Church from his life;
it can be that he often thinks of them and intends to make time for
them, but somehow in his crowded life never gets round to it. We must be
careful to see that Christ is not shouldered out of the topmost niche
in life.
(iv) There is the man who is like the good ground. In his
reception of the word there are four stages. Like the good ground, his
mind is open. He is at all times willing to learn. He is prepared to
hear. He is never either too proud or too busy to listen. Many a man
would have been saved all kinds of heartbreak, if he had simply stopped
to listen to the voice of a wise friend, or to the voice of God. He
understands. He has thought the thing out and knows what this means for
him, and is prepared to accept it. He translates his hearing into
action. He produces the good fruit of the good seed. The real hearer is
the man who listens, who understands, and who obeys.
No Despair (Matthew 13:1-9; Matthew 13:18-23 Continued)
(b) We said this parable had a double impact. We have looked at the
impact it was designed to have on those who hear the word. But it was
equally designed to have an impact on those who preach the word. Not
only was it meant to say something to the listening crowds; it was also
meant to say something to the inner circle of the disciples.
It is not difficult to see that in the hearts of the disciples
there must sometimes have been a certain discouragement. To them Jesus
was everything, the wisest and the most wonderful of all. But, humanly
speaking, he had very little success. The doors of the synagogue were
shutting against him. The leaders of orthodox religion were his
bitterest critics and were obviously out to destroy him. True, the
crowds came to hear him, but there were so few who were really changed,
and so many who came to reap the benefit of his healing power, and, who,
when they had received it, went away and forgot. There were so many who
came to Jesus only for what they could get. The disciples were faced
with a situation in which Jesus seemed to rouse nothing but hostility in
the leaders of the Church, and nothing but a very evanescent response
in the crowd. It is nothing surprising if in the hearts of the disciples
there was sometimes deep disappointment. What then does the parable say
to the preacher who is discouraged?
Its lesson is clear--the harvest is sure. For discouraged
preachers of the word the lesson is in the climax of the parable, in the
picture of the seed which brought forth abundant fruit. Some seed may
fall by the wayside and be snatched away by the birds; some seed may
fall on the shallow ground and never come to maturity; some seed may fat
among the thorns and be choked to death; but in spite of all that the
harvest does come. No farmer expects every single seed he sows to
germinate and bring forth fruit. He knows quite well that some will be
blown away by the wind, and some will fall in places where it cannot
grow; but that does not stop him sowing. Nor does it make him give up
hope of the harvest. The farmer sows in the confidence that, even if
some of the seed is wasted, none the less the harvest will certainly
come.
So then this is a parable of encouragement to those who sow the seed of the word.
(i) When a man sows the seed of the word, he does not know what
he is doing or what effect the seed is having. H. L. Gee tells this
story. In the church where he worshipped there was a lonely old man, old
Thomas. He had outlived all his friends and hardly anyone knew him.
When Thomas died, Gee had the feeling that there would be no one to go
to the funeral so he decided to go, so that there might be someone to
follow the old man to his last resting-place.
There was no one else and it was a wild, wet day. The funeral
reached the cemetery; and at the gate there was a soldier waiting. He
was an officer, but on his raincoat there were no rank badges. The
soldier came to the graveside for the ceremony; when it was over he
stepped forward and before the open grave swept his hand to a salute
that might have been given to a king. H. L. Gee walked away with this
soldier, and as they walked, the wind blew the soldier's raincoat open
to reveal the shoulder badges of a brigadier.
The brigadier said to Gee: "You will perhaps be wondering what I
am doing here. Years ago Thomas was my Sunday School teacher; I was a
wild lad and a sore trial to him. He never knew what he did for me, but I
owe everything I am or will be to old Thomas, and today I had to come
to salute him at the end." Thomas did not know what he was doing. No
preacher or teacher ever does. It is our task to sow the seed, and to
leave the rest to God.
(ii) When a man sows the seed, he must not look for quick
results. There is never any haste in nature's growth. It takes a long,
long time before an acorn becomes an oak; and it may take a long, long
time before the seed germinates in the heart of a man. But often a word
dropped into a man's heart in his boyhood lies dormant until some day it
awakens and saves him from some great temptation or even preserves his
soul from death. We live in an age which looks for quick results, but in
the sowing of the seed we must sow in patience and, in hope, and
sometimes must leave the harvest to the years.
The Truth And The Listener (Matthew 13:10-17; Matthew 13:34-35)
13:10-17,34,35
The disciples came and said to him: "Why do you speak to them in
parables?" "To you," he answered them, "it has been given to know the
secrets of the Kingdom, which only a disciple can understand, but to
them it has not been so given. For it will be given to him who already
has, and he will have an overflowing knowledge. But what he has will be
taken away from him who has not. It is for that reason that I speak to
them in parables, for although they can see, they do not see; and
although they can hear, they do not hear or understand. There is being
fulfilled in them Isaiah's prophecy which says, 'You will certainly
hear, but you will not understand; and you will certainly look, but you
will not see; for the heart of this people has grown fat, and they hear
dully with their ears, and their eyes are smeared, lest at any time they
should see with their eyes, and hear with their ears, and understand
with their heart, and turn, and I will heal them. But blessed are your
eyes for they see, and your ears because they hear.' This is the truth I
tell you--many prophets and righteous men longed to see things that you
are seeing, and did not see them, and to hear the things that you are
hearing, and did not hear them."
Jesus spake all these
things to the crowds in parables, and it was not his custom to speak to
them without a parable. He did this that that which was spoken through
the prophet might be fulfilled: "I will open my mouth in parables: I
will utter things which have been hidden since the foundation of the
world."
This is a passage full of difficult things; and we must take
time to try to seek out its meaning. First of all there are two general
things at the beginning which, if we understand them, will go far to
light up the whole passage.
The Greek word in Matthew 13:11, which I have translated
secrets (as the Revised Standard Version also does), is musteria
(Greek #3466). This means literally mysteries which is, in fact, how
the King James Version renders it. In New Testament times this
word mystery was used in a special and a technical way. To us a
mystery means simply something dark and difficult and impossible
to understand, something mysterious. But in New Testament times
it was the technical name for something which was unintelligible
to the outsider but crystal clear to the man who had been
initiated.
In the time of Jesus in both Greece and Rome the most
intense and real religion was found in what were known as the
Mystery Religions. These religions had all a common character.
They were in essence passion plays in which was told in drama the
story of some god or goddess who had lived and suffered and died
and who had risen again to blessedness. The initiate was given a
long course of instruction in which the inner meaning of the
drama was explained to him; that course of instruction extended
over months and even years. Before he was allowed finally to see
the drama he had to undergo a period of fasting and abstinence.
Everything was done to work him up to a state of emotion and of
expectation. He was then taken to see the play; the atmosphere
was carefully constructed; there was cunning lighting; there were
incenses and perfumes; there was sensuous music; there was in
many cases a noble liturgy. The drama was then played out; and it
was intended to produce in the worshipper a complete
identification with the god whose story was told on the stage.
The worshipper was intended literally to share in the divinity's
life and sufferings and death and resurrection, and therefore
shared in his immortality. The cry of the worshipper in the end
was: "I am Thou, and Thou art I."
We take an actual example. One of the most famous of all the
mysteries was the mystery of Isis. Osiris was a wise and good king.
Seth, his wicked brother, hated him, and with seventy-two conspirators
persuaded him to come to a banquet. There he persuaded him to enter a
cunningly wrought coffin which exactly fitted him. When Osiris was in
the coffin, the lid was snapped down and the coffin was flung into the
Nile. After long and weary search, Isis, the faithful wife of Osiris,
found the coffin and brought it home in mourning. But when she was
absent from home, the wicked Seth came again, stole the body of Osiris,
cut it into fourteen pieces, and scattered it throughout all Egypt. Once
again Isis set out on her weary and sorrowful quest. After long search
she found all the pieces; by a wondrous power the pieces were fitted
together and Osiris rose from the dead; and he became for ever
afterwards the immortal king of the living and the dead.
It is easy to see how moving a story that could be made to one
who had undergone a tong instruction, to one who saw it in the most
carefully calculated setting. There is the story of the good king; there
is the attack of sin; there is the sorrowing search of love; there is
the triumphant finding of love; there is the raising to a life which has
conquered death. It was with that experience that the worshipper was
meant to identify himself, and he was supposed to emerge from it, in the
famous phrase of the Mystery Religions, "reborn for eternity".
That is a mystery; something meaningless to the outsider, but
supremely precious to the initiate. In point of fact the Lord's Supper
is like that. To one who has never seen such a thing before, it will
look like a company of men eating little pieces of bread and drinking
little sips of wine, and it might even appear ridiculous. But to the man
who knows what he is doing, to the man initiated into its meaning, it
is the most precious and the most moving act of worship in the Church.
So Jesus says to his disciples: "Outsiders cannot understand
what I say; but you know me; you are my disciples; you can understand."
Christianity can be understood only from the inside. It is only after
personal encounter with Jesus Christ that a man can understand. To
criticize from outside is to criticize in ignorance. It is only the man
who is prepared to become a disciple who can enter into the most
precious things of the Christian faith.
Life's Stern Law (Matthew 13:10-17; Matthew 13:34-35 Continued)
The second general thing is the saying in Matthew 13:12
that still more will be given to the man who has, and even what he has
will be taken away from the man who has not. At first sight this seems
nothing less than cruel; but so far from being cruel, it simply states a
truth which is an inescapable law of life.
In every sphere of life more is given to the man who has, and
what he has is taken away from the man who has not. In the world of
scholarship the student who labours to amass knowledge is capable of
acquiring more knowledge. It is to him that the research, the advanced
courses, the deeper things are given; and that is so because by his
diligence and fidelity he has made himself fit to receive them. On the
other hand, the student who is lazy and refuses to work inevitably loses
even the knowledge which he has.
Many a person in childhood and schooldays had a smattering of
Latin or of French or of some other language, and in later life lost
every word, because he never made any attempt to develop or use them.
Many a person had some skill in a craft or game and lost it, because he
neglected it. The diligent and hard-working person is in a position to
be given more and more; the lazy person may well lose even what he has.
Any gift can be developed; and, since nothing in life stands still, if a
gift is not developed, it is lost.
It is so with goodness. Every temptation we conquer makes us
more able to conquer the next and every temptation to which we fail
makes us less able to withstand the next attack. Every good thing we do,
every act of self-discipline and of service, makes us better able for
the next; and every time we fail to use such an opportunity we make
ourselves less able to seize the next when it comes.
Life is always a process of gaining more or losing more. Jesus
laid down the truth that the nearer a man lives to him, the nearer to
the Christian ideal he will grow. And the more a man drifts away from
Christ, the less he is able to reach to goodness; for weakness, like
strength, is an increasing thing.
Man's Blindness And God's Purpose (Matthew 13:10-17; Matthew 13:34-35 Continued)
Matthew 13:13-17
of this passage are among the most difficult verses in the whole gospel
narrative. And the fact that they appear differently in the different
gospels shows how much that difficulty was felt in the early Church.
Being the earliest gospel, we would expect Mark to be the nearest to the
actual words of Jesus. It (Mark 4:11-12) has:
To you has been given the secret of the kingdom of God, but for
those outside everything is in parables; so that they may indeed
see but not perceive, and may indeed hear but not understand;
lest they should turn again, and be forgiven.
If these verses be taken at their superficial value
with no attempt to understand their real meaning, they make the
extraordinary statement that Jesus spoke to men in parables in order
that they might not understand, and in order to prevent them turning to
God and finding forgiveness.
Matthew is later than Mark and makes one significant change:
This is why I speak to them in parables, because seeing they do
not see, and hearing they do not here, nor do they understand.
As Matthew has it, Jesus spoke in parables because men were too blind and deaf to glimpse the truth in any other way.
It is to be noted that this saying of Jesus leads into a quotation from Isaiah 6:9-10.
That was another passage which caused a great deal of heart-searching.
In the Revised Standard Version, which is a literal translation of the
Hebrew, it runs:
Go, and say to this people: "Hear and hear, but do not
understand; see and see, but do not perceive." Make the heart of
this people fat, and their ears heavy, and shut their eyes; lest
they see with their eyes, and hear with their ears, and understand
with their hearts, and turn and be healed.
Again it sounds as if God had deliberately blinded the
eyes and deafened the ears and hardened the hearts of the people, so
that they would be unable to understand. The nation's lack of
understanding is made to seem a deliberate act of God.
Just as Matthew toned down Mark, so the Septuagint, the
Greek translation of the Hebrew scriptures, and the version which most
Jews used in the time of Jesus, toned down the original Hebrew:
Go, say to this people: "Ye shall hear indeed, but ye shall not
understand; and seeing ye shall see and not perceive." For the
heart of this people has become gross, and with their ears they
hear heavily, and their eyes they have closed, lest at any time
they should see with their eyes, and hear with their ears, and
understand with their heart, and should be converted, and I
should heal them.
The Septuagint, so to speak, removes the responsibility from God and lays it fairly and squarely upon the people.
What is the explanation of all this? We may be certain
of one thing--whatever else this passage means, it cannot mean that
Jesus deliberately delivered his message in such a way that people would
fail to understand it. Jesus did not come to hide the truth from men;
he came to reveal it. And beyond a doubt there were times when men
grasped that truth.
When the orthodox Jewish leaders heard the threat of
the Parable of the Wicked Husbandmen, they understood all right, and
recoiled in horror from its message to say: "God forbid!" (Luke 20:16). And in Matthew 13:34-35 of this present passage Jesus quotes a saying of the Psalmist:
Give ear, O my people, to my teaching; incline your ears to the
words of my mouth. I will open my mouth in a parable; I will
utter dark sayings from of old, things that we have heard and
known, that our fathers have told us.
That is a quotation from Psalms 78:1-3,
and in it the Psalmist knows that what he is saying will be understood,
and that he is recalling men to truth that both they and their fathers
have known.
The truth is that the words of Isaiah, and the use that Jesus
made of them, must be read with insight and with an attempt to put
ourselves in the position both of Isaiah and of Jesus. These words tell
of three things.
(i) They tell of a prophet's bewilderment. The prophet brought a
message to people which to him was crystal clear; and he was bewildered
that they could not understand it. That is repeatedly the experience of
both the preacher and the teacher. Often when we preach or teach or
discuss things with people, we try to tell them something which to us is
relevant, vivid, of absorbing interest and of paramount importance, and
they hear it with a complete lack of interest, understanding, and
urgency. And we are amazed and bewildered that what means so much to us
apparently means nothing at all to them, that what kindles a fire in our
bones leaves them stone cold, that what thrills and moves our hearts
leaves them icily indifferent. That is the experience of every teacher
and preacher and evangelist.
(ii) They tell of a prophet's despair. It was Isaiah's feeling
that his preaching was actually doing more harm than good, that he might
as wet speak to a brick wall, that there was no way into the mind and
the heart of this deaf and blind people, that, as far as any effects
went, they seemed to be getting worse instead of better. Again that is
the experience of every teacher and preacher. There are times when those
whom we seek to win seem, in spite of all our efforts, to be getting
further away from, instead of nearer to, the Christian way. Our words go
whistling down the wind; our message meets the impenetrable barrier of
men's indifference; the result of all our work seems less than nothing,
for at the end of it men seem further away from God than they were at
the beginning.
(iii) But these words tell of something more than a prophet's
bewilderment and a prophet's despair; they also tell of a prophet's
ultimate faith. Here we find ourselves face to face with a Jewish
conviction apart from which much of what the prophet, and of what Jesus,
and of what the early Church said is not fully intelligible.
To put it simply, it was a primary article of Jewish belief that
nothing in this world happens outside the will of God; and when they
said nothing they meant literally nothing. It was just as much God's
will when men did not listen as when they did; it was just as much God's
will when men refused to understand the truth as when they welcomed it.
The Jew clung fast to the belief that everything had its place in the
purpose of God and that somehow God was weaving together success and
failure, good and evil in a web of his designing.
The ultimate purpose of everything was good. It is exactly this thought that Paul plays on in Romans 9:11.
These are the chapters which tell how the Jews, the chosen people of
God, actually refused God's truth and crucified God's son when he came
to them. That sounds inexplicable. But what was the result of it? The
gospel went out to the Gentiles; and the ultimate result is that the
Gentiles will some day gather in the Jews. The apparent evil is gathered
up in a larger good, for all is within the plan of God.
That is what Isaiah was feeling. At first he was bewildered and
in despair; then the light came and in effect he said "I cannot
understand the conduct of this people; but I know that all this failure
is somehow in the ultimate purpose of God, and he will use it for his
own ultimate glory and for the ultimate good of men." Jesus took these
words of Isaiah and used them to encourage his disciples; he said in
effect, "I know that this looks disappointing; I know how you are
feeling when men's minds and hearts refuse to receive the truth and when
their eyes refuse to recognize it; but in this, too, there is
purpose--and some day you will see it."
Here is our own great encouragement. Sometimes we see our
harvest and we are glad; sometimes there seems to be nothing but barren
ground, nothing but total lack of response, nothing but failure. That
may be so to human eyes and human minds, but at the back of it there is a
God who is fitting even that failure into the divine plan of his
omniscient mind and his omnipotent power. There are no failures and
there are no loose ends in the ultimate plan of God.
The Act Of An Enemy (Matthew 13:24-30; Matthew 13:36-43)
13:24-30,36-43
Jesus put forward another parable. "The Kingdom of Heaven," he said to
them, "is like what happened when a man sowed good seed in his field.
When men slept, his enemy came and sowed darnel in the middle of the
corn, and went away. When the green grain grew, and when it began to
produce its crop, then the darnel appeared. The servants of the master
of the house came to him and said, 'Sir, did we not sow good seed in
your field? From where, then, did it get the darnel?' 'An enemy has done
this,' he said to them. The servants said to him, 'Do you wish us to go
and collect the darnel?' But he said, 'No; for if you gather the darnel
the danger is that you may root up the corn at the same time. Let them
both grow together until the harvest time; and at the time of the
harvest I will say to the reapers, "First gather the darnel and bind
them into bundles for burning. But gather the corn into my
storehouse."'"
When he had sent the
crowds away, he went into the house. His disciples came to him. "Explain
to us," they said, "The parable of the darnel in the field." He
answered: "He who sows the good seed is the Son of Man. The field is the
world. The good seed stands for the sons of the Kingdom; the darnel is
the sons of the evil one. The enemy who sowed it is the devil. The
harvest is the end of this age; the reapers are the angels. Just as the
darnel is gathered and burned with fire, so it will be at the end of
this age. The Son of Man will send his angels, and they will gather all
the stumbling-blocks, and all those who act lawlessly, out of the
Kingdom, and will cast them into the furnace of fire; and weeping and
gnashing of teeth will be there. Then the righteous will shine as the
sun in the Kingdom of their Father. Who has ears let him hear."
The pictures in this parable would be clear and familiar to a
Palestinian audience. Tares were one of the curses against which a
farmer had to labour. They were a weed called bearded darnel (Lolium
Temulentum). In their early stages the tares so closely resembled the
wheat that it was impossible to distinguish the one from the other. When
both had headed out it was easy to distinguish them; but by that time
their roots were so intertwined that the tares could not be weeded out
without tearing the wheat out with them.
Thomson in The Land and the Book tells how he saw the tares in
the Wady Hamam: "The grain is just in the proper stale of development to
illustrate the parable. In those parts where the grain has headed out,
the tares have done the same, and there a child cannot mistake them for
wheat or barley; but when both are less developed, the closest scrutiny
will often fail to detect them. I cannot do it at all with any
confidence. Even the farmers, who in this country generally weed their
fields, do not attempt to separate the one from the other. They would
not only mistake good grain for them, but very commonly the roots of the
two are so intertwined that it is impossible to separate them without
plucking up both. Both, therefore, must be left to grow together until
the time of harvest."
The tares and the wheat are so like each other that the Jews
called the tares bastard wheat. The Hebrew for tares is zunim, whence
comes the Greek zizanion (Greek #2215); zunim is said to be connected with the word zanah (Hebrew #2181),
which means to commit fornication; and the popular story is that the
tares took their origin in the time of wickedness which preceded the
flood, for at that time the whole creation, men, animals and plants, all
went astray, and committed fornication and brought forth contrary to
nature. In their early stages the wheat and the tares so closely
resembled each other that the popular idea was that the tares were a
kind of wheat which had gone wrong.
The wheat and tares could not be safely separated when both were
growing, but in the end they had to be separated, because the grain of
the bearded darnel is slightly poisonous. It causes dizziness and
sickness and is narcotic in its effects, and even a small amount has a
bitter and unpleasant taste. In the end it was usually separated by
hand. Levison describes the process: "Women have to be hired to pick the
darnel grain out of the seed which is to be milled.... As a rule the
separation of the darnel from the wheat is done after the threshing. By
spreading the grain out on a large tray which is set before the women,
they are able to pick out the darnel, which is a seed similar in shape
and size to wheat, but slate-grey in colour."
So then the darnel in its early stages was indistinguishable
from the wheat, but in the end it had to be laboriously separated from
it, or the consequences were serious.
The picture of a man deliberately sowing darnel in someone
else's field is by no means only imagination. That was actually
sometimes done. To this day in India one of the direst threats which a
man can make to his enemy is "I will sow bad seed in your field." And in
codified Roman law this crime is forbidden and its punishment laid
down.
The whole series of pictures within this parable was familiar to the people of Galilee who heard it for the first time.
The Time For Judgment (Matthew 13:24-30; Matthew 13:36-43 Continued)
It may well be said that in its lessons this is one of the most practical parables Jesus ever told.
(i) It teaches us that there is always a hostile power in the
world, seeking and waiting to destroy the good seed. Our experience is
that both kinds of influence act upon our lives, the influence which
helps the seed of the word to flourish and to grow, and the influence
which seeks to destroy the good seed before it can produce fruit at all.
The lesson is that we must be for ever on our guard.
(ii) It teaches us how hard it is to distinguish between those
who are in the Kingdom and those who are not. A man may appear to be
good and may in fact be bad; and a man may appear to be bad and may yet
be good. We are much too quick to classify people and label them good or
bad without knowing all the facts.
(iii) It teaches us not to be so quick with our judgments. If
the reapers had had their way, they would have tried to tear out the
darnel and they would have torn out the wheat as well. Judgment had to
wait until the harvest came. A man in the end will be judged, not by any
single act or stage in his life, but by his whole life. Judgment cannot
come until the end. A man may make a great mistake, and then redeem
himself and, by the grace of God, atone for it by making the rest of
life a lovely thing. A man may live an honourable life and then in the
end wreck it all by a sudden collapse into sin. No one who sees only
part of a thing can judge the whole; and no one who knows only part of a
man's life can judge the whole man.
(iv) It teaches us that judgment does come in the end. Judgment
is not hasty, but judgment comes. It may be that, humanly speaking, in
this life the sinner seems to escape the consequences, but there is a
life to come. It may be that, humanly speaking, goodness never seems to
enter into its reward, but there is a new world to redress the balance
of the old.
(v) It teaches us that the only person with the right to judge
is God. It is God alone who can discern the good and the bad; it is God
alone who sees all of a man and all of his life. It is God alone who can
judge.
So, then, ultimately this parable is two things--it is a warning
not to judge people at all, and it is a warning that in the end there
comes the judgment of God.
The Small Beginning (Matthew 13:31-32)
13:31-32 Jesus
put forward another parable to them: "The Kingdom of Heaven is like a
grain of mustard seed, which a man took and sowed in his field. It is
the smallest of all seeds, and, when it has grown, it is the greatest of
herbs, and it becomes a tree, so that the birds of the air come and
lodge in its branches."
The mustard plant of Palestine was very different from the
mustard plant which we know in this country. To be strictly accurate the
mustard seed is not the smallest of seeds; the seed of the cypress
tree, for instance, is still smaller; but in the east it was proverbial
for smallness. For example, the Jews talked of a drop of blood as small
as a mustard seed; or, if they were talking of some tiny breach of the
ceremonial law, they would speak of a defilement as small as a mustard
seed; and Jesus himself used the phrase in this way when he spoke of
faith as a grain of mustard seed (Matthew 17:20).
In Palestine this little grain of mustard seed did grow into
something very like a tree. Thomson in The Land and the Book writes: "I
have seen this plant on the rich plain of Akkar as tall as the horse and
his rider." He says, "With the help of my guide, I uprooted a veritable
mustard-tree which was more than twelve feet high." In this parable
there is no exaggeration at all.
Further, it was a common sight to see such mustard bushes or
trees surrounded with a cloud of birds, for the birds love the little
black seeds of the tree, and settle on the tree to eat them.
Jesus said that his Kingdom was like the mustard seed and its
growth into a tree. The point is crystal clear. The Kingdom of Heaven
starts from the smallest beginnings, but no man knows where it will end.
In eastern language and in the Old Testament itself one of the
commonest pictures of a great empire is the picture of a great tree,
with the subject nations depicted as birds finding rest and shelter
within its branches (Ezekiel 31:6).
This parable tells us that the Kingdom of Heaven begins very small but
that in the end many nations will be gathered within it.
It is the fact of history that the greatest things must always begin with the smallest beginnings.
(i) An idea which may well change civilization begins with one
man. In the British Empire it was William Wilberforce who was
responsible for the freeing of the slaves. The idea of that liberation
came to him when he read an exposure of the slave trade by Thomas
Clarkson. He was a close friend of Pitt, then Prime Minister, and one
day he was sitting with him and George Grenville in Pitt's garden at
Holwood. It was a scene of beauty, with the Vale of Keston opening out
before them, but the thoughts of Wilberforce were not on that but on the
blots of the world. Suddenly Pitt turned to him: "Wilberforce," he
said, "why don't you give a notice of a motion on the slave-trade?" An
idea was sown in the mind of one man, and that idea changed life for
hundreds of thousands of people. An idea must find a man willing to be
possessed by it; but when it finds such a man an unstoppable tide begins
to flow.
(ii) A witness must begin with one man. Cecil Northcott tells in
one of his books that a group of young people from many nations were
discussing how the Christian gospel might be spread. They talked of
propaganda, of literature, of all the ways of disseminating the gospel
in the twentieth century. Then the girl from Africa spoke. "When we want
to take Christianity to one of our villages," she said, "we don't send
them books. We take a Christian family and send them to live in the
village and they make the village Christian by living there." In a group
or society, or school or factory, or shop or office, again and again it
is the witness of one individual which brings in Christianity. The one
man or woman set on fire for Christ is the person who kindles others.
(iii) A reformation begins with one person. One of the great
stories of the Christian Church is the story of Telemachus. He was a
hermit of the desert, but something told him--the call of God--that he
must go to Rome. He went. Rome was nominally Christian, but even in
Christian Rome the gladiatorial games went on, in which men fought with
each other, and crowds roared with the lust for blood. Telemachus found
his way to the games. Eighty thousand people were there to spectate. He
was horrified. Were these men slaughtering each other not also children
of God? He leaped from his seat, right into the arena, and stood between
the gladiators. He was tossed aside. He came back. The crowd were
angry; they began to stone him. Still he struggled back between the
gladiators. The prefect's command rang out; a sword flashed in the
sunlight, and Telemachus was dead. Suddenly there was a hush; suddenly
the crowd realized what had happened; a holy man lay dead. Something
happened that day to Rome, for there were never again any gladiatorial
games. By his death one man had let loose something that cleansed an
empire. Someone must begin a reformation; he need not begin it in a
nation; he may begin it in his home or where he works. If he begins it
no man knows where it will end.
(iv) But this was one of the most personal parables Jesus ever
spoke. Sometimes his disciples must have despaired. Their little band
was so small and the world was so wide. How could they ever win and
change it. Yet with Jesus an invincible force entered the world. Hugh
Martin quotes H. G. Wets as saying, "His is easily the dominant figure
in history.... A historian without any theological bias whatever should
find that he simply cannot portray the progress of humanity honestly
without giving a foremost place to a penniless teacher from Nazareth."
In this parable Jesus is saying to his disciples, and to his followers
today, that there must be no discouragement, that they must serve and
witness each in his place, that each one must be the small beginning
from which the Kingdom grows until the kingdoms of the earth finally
become the Kingdom of God
"Though few and small and weak your bands,
Strong in your Captain's strength,
Go to the conquest of all lands;
All must be His at length."
The Transforming Power Of Christ (Matthew 13:33)
13:33 He spoke
another parable to them: "The Kingdom of Heaven is like leaven, which a
woman took and hid in three measures of meal, until the whole was
leavened."
In this chapter there is nothing more significant than the
sources from which Jesus drew his parables. In every case he drew them
from the scenes and activities of everyday lifer. He began with things
which were entirely familiar to his hearers in order to lead them to
things which had never yet entered their minds. He took the parable of
the sower from the farmer's field and the parable of the mustard seed
from the husbandman's garden; he took the parable of the wheat and the
tares from the perennial problem which confronts the farmer in his
struggle with the weeds, and the parable of the drag-net from the
seashore of the Sea of Galilee. He took the parable of the hidden
treasure from the everyday task of digging in a field, and the parable
of the pearl of great price from the world of commerce and trade. But in
this parable of the leaven Jesus came nearer home than in any other
because he took it from the kitchen of an ordinary house.
In Palestine bread was baked at home; three measures of meal
was, as Levinson points out, just the average amount which would be
needed for a baking for a fairly large family, like the family at
Nazareth. Jesus took his parable of the Kingdom from something that he
had often seen his mother, Mary, do. Leaven was a little piece of dough
kept over from a previous baking, which had fermented in the keeping.
In Jewish language and thought leaven is almost always connected
with an evil influence; the Jews connected fermentation with
putrefaction and leaven stood for that which is evil (compare Matthew 16:6; 1 Corinthians 5:6-8; Galatians 5:9).
One of the ceremonies of preparation for the Passover Feast was that
every scrap of leaven had to be sought out from the house and burned. It
may well be that Jesus chose this illustration of the Kingdom
deliberately. There would be a certain shock in hearing the Kingdom of
God compared to leaven; and the shock would arouse interest and rivet
attention, as an illustration from an unusual and unexpected source
always does.
The whole point of the parable lies in one thing--the
transforming power of the leaven. Leaven changed the character of a
whole baking. Unleavened bread is like a water biscuit, hard, dry,
unappetizing and uninteresting; bread baked with leaven is soft and
porous and spongy, tasty and good to eat. The introduction of the leaven
causes a transformation in the dough; and the coming of the Kingdom
causes a transformation in life.
Let us gather together the characteristics of this transformation.
(i) Christianity transformed life for the individual man. In 1 Corinthians 6:9-10,
Paul gathers together a list of the most terrible and disgusting kinds
of sinners, and then, in the next verse, there comes the tremendous
statement: "And such were some of you." As Denney had it, we must never
forget that the function and the power of Christ is to make bad men
good. The transformation of Christianity begins in the individual life,
for through Christ the victim of temptation can become the victor over
it.
(ii) There are four great social directions in which
Christianity transformed life. Christianity transformed life for women.
The Jew in his morning prayer thanked God that he had not made him a
Gentile, a slave or a woman. In Greek civilization the woman lived a
life of utter seclusion, with nothing to do beyond the household tasks.
K. J. Freeman writes of the life of the Greek child or young man even in
the great days of Athens, "When he came home, there was no home life.
His father was hardly ever in the house. His mother was a nonentity,
living in the women's apartments; he probably saw little of her." In the
eastern lands it was often possible to see a family on a journey. The
father would be mounted on an ass; the mother would be walking, and
probably bent beneath a burden. One demonstrable historical truth is
that Christianity transformed life for women.
(iii) Christianity transformed life for the weak and the ill. In
heathen life the weak and the ill were considered a nuisance. In Sparta
a child, when he was born, was submitted to the examiners; if he was
fit, he was allowed to live; if he was weakly or deformed, he was
exposed to death on the mountain side. Dr. A. Rendle Short points out
that the first blind asylum was founded by Thalasius, a Christian monk;
the first free dispensary was founded by Apollonius, a Christian
merchant; the first hospital of which there is any record was founded by
Fabiola, a Christian lady. Christianity was the first faith to be
interested in the broken things of life.
(iv) Christianity transformed life for the aged. Like the weak,
the aged were a nuisance. Cato, the Roman writer on agriculture, gives
advice to anyone who is taking over a farm: "Look over the livestock and
hold a sale. Sell your oil, if the price is satisfactory, and sell the
surplus of your wine and grain. Set worn-out oxen, blemished cattle,
blemished sheep, wool, hides, an old wagon, old tools, an old slave, a
sickly slave, and whatever else is superfluous." The old, whose day's
work was done, were fit for nothing else than to be discarded on the
rubbish heaps of life. Christianity was the first faith to regard men as
persons and not instruments capable of doing so much work.
(v) Christianity transformed life for the child. In the
immediate background of Christianity, the marriage relationship had
broken down, and the home was in peril. Divorce was so common that it
was neither unusual nor particularly blameworthy for a woman to have a
new husband every year. In such circumstances children were a disaster;
and the custom of simply exposing children to death was tragically
common. There is a well-known letter from a man Hilarion, who was gone
off to Alexandria, to his wife Alis, whom he has left at home. He writes
to her: "If--good luck to you--you bear a child, if it is a boy, let it
live; if it is a girl, throw it out." In modem civilization life is
almost butt round the child; in ancient civilization the child had a
very good chance of dying before it had begun to live.
Anyone who asks the question: "What has Christianity done for
the world?" has delivered himself into a Christian debator's hands.
There is nothing in history so unanswerably demonstrable as the
transforming power of Christianity and of Christ on the individual life
and on the life of society.
The Working Of The Leaven (Matthew 13:33 Continued)
There remains only one question in regard to this parable of
the leaven. Almost all scholars would agree that it speaks of the
transforming power of Christ and of his Kingdom in the life of the
individual and of the world; but there is a difference of opinion as to
how that transforming power works.
(i) It is sometimes said that the lesson of this
parable is that the Kingdom works unseen. We cannot see the leaven
working in the dough, any more than we can see a flower growing, but the
work of the leaven is always going on. Just so, it is said, we cannot
see the work of the Kingdom, but always the Kingdom is working and
drawing men and the world ever nearer to God.
This, then, would be a message of encouragement. It
would mean that at all times we must take the long view, that we must
not compare things of the present day with last week, month, or even
last year, but that we must look back down the centuries, and then we
will see the steady progress of the Kingdom. As A. H. Clough had it:
"Say not, 'The struggle nought availeth;
The labour and the wounds are vain;
The enemy faints not nor faileth,
And as things have been they remain.'
If hopes were dupes, fears may be liars;
It may be, in yon smoke concealed,
Your comrades chase even now the fliers,
And, but for you, possess the field.
For while the tired waves, vainly breaking,
Seem here no painful inch to gain,
Far back, through creeks and inlets making,
Comes silent, flooding in, the main.
And, not by eastern windows only,
When daylight comes, comes in the light;
In front the sun climbs slow, how slowly!
But westward, look! the land is bright."
On this view the parable teaches that with Jesus Christ and his
gospel a new force has been let loose in the world, and that, silently
but inevitably, that force is working for righteousness in the world and
God indeed is working his purpose out as year succeeds to year.
(ii) But it has sometimes been said, as for instance by C. H.
Dodd, that the lesson of the parable is the very opposite of this, and
that, so far from being unseen, the working of the Kingdom can be
plainly seen. The working of the leaven is plain for all to see. Put the
leaven into the dough, and the leaven changes the dough from a passive
lump into a seething, bubbling, heaving mass. Just so the working of the
Kingdom is a violent and disturbing force plain for all to see. When
Christianity came to Thessalonica the cry was: "These men who have
turned the world upside down have come here also" (Acts 17:6). The action of Christianity is disruptive, disturbing, violent in its effect.
There is undeniable truth there. It is true that men crucified
Jesus Christ because he disturbed all their orthodox habits and
conventions; again and again it has been true that Christianity has been
persecuted because it desired to take both men and society and remake
them. It is abundantly true that there is nothing in this world so
disturbing as Christianity; that is, in fact, the reason why so many
people resent it and refuse it, and wish to eliminate it.
When we come to think of it, we do not need to choose between
these two views of the parable, because they are both true. There is a
sense in which the Kingdom, the power of Christ, the Spirit of God, is
always working, whether or not we see that work; and there is a sense in
which it is plain to see. Many an individual life is manifestly and
violently changed by Christ; and at the same time there is the silent
operation of the purposes of God in the long road of history.
We may put it in a picture like this. The Kingdom, the power of
Christ, the Spirit of God, is like a great river, which for much of its
course glides on beneath the ground unseen, but which ever and again
comes to the surface in all its greatness, plain for all to see. This
parable teaches both that the Kingdom is for ever working unseen, and
that there are times in every individual life and in history when the
work of the Kingdom is so obvious, and so manifestly powerful, that all
can see it.
All In The Day's Work (Matthew 13:44)
13:44 "The
Kingdom of Heaven is like a treasure which lay hidden in a field. A man
found it, and hid it; and, as a result of his joy, away he goes, and
sells everything that he has, and buys the field."
Although this parable sounds strange to us, it would sound
perfectly natural to people in Palestine in the days of Jesus, and even
to this day it paints a picture which people in the East would know
well.
In the ancient world there were banks, but not banks such as
ordinary people could use. Ordinary people used the ground as the safest
place to keep their most cherished belonging. In the parable of the
talents the worthless servant hid his talent in the ground, lest he
should lose it (Matthew 25:25). There was a rabbinic saying that there was only one safe repository for money--the earth.
This was still more the case in a land where a man's garden
might at any time become a battlefield. Palestine was probably the most
fought over country in the world; and, when the tide of war threatened
to flow over them, it was common practice for people to hide their
valuables in the ground, before they took to flight, in the hope that
the day would come when they could return and regain them. Josephus
speaks of "the gold and the silver and the rest of that most precious
furniture which the Jews had, and which the owners treasured up
underground against the uncertain fortunes of war."
Thomson in The Land and the Book, which was first published in
1876, tells of a case of treasure discovery which he himself came upon
in Sidon. There was in that city a famous avenue of acacia trees.
Certain workmen, digging in a garden on that avenue, uncovered several
copper pots full of gold coins. They had every intention of keeping the
find to themselves; but there were so many of them, and they were so
wild with excitement, that their treasure trove was discovered and
claimed by the local government. The coins were all coins of Alexander
the Great and his father Philip. Thomson suggests that, when Alexander
unexpectedly died in Babylon, news came through to Sidon, and some
Macedonian officer or government official buried these coins with the
intention of appropriating them in the chaos which was bound to follow
Alexander's death. Thomson goes on to tell how there are even people who
make it their life's business to search for hidden treasure, and that
they get into such a state of excitement that they have been known to
faint at the discovery of one single coin. When Jesus told this story,
he told the kind of story that anyone would recognize in Palestine and
in the east generally.
It may be thought that in this parable Jesus glorifies a man who
was guilty of very sharp practice in that he hid the treasure, and then
took steps to possess himself of it. There are two things to be said
about that. First, although Palestine in the time of Jesus was under the
Romans and under Roman law, in the ordinary, small, day to day things
it was traditional Jewish law which was used; and in regard to hidden
treasure Jewish Rabbinic law was quite clear: "What finds belong to the
finder, and what finds must one cause to be proclaimed? These finds
belong to the finder--if a man finds scattered fruit, scattered
money...these belong to the finder." In point of fact this man had a
prior right to what he had found.
Second, even apart from that, when we are dealing with any
parable, the details are never meant to be stressed; the parable has one
main point, and to that point everything else is subservient. In this
parable the great point is the joy of the discovery that made the man
willing to give up everything to make the treasure indubitably his own.
Nothing else in the parable really matters.
(i) The lesson of this parable is, first, that the man found the
precious thing, not so much by chance, as in his day's work. It is true
to say that he stumbled all unexpectedly upon it, but he did so when he
was going about his daily business. And it is legitimate to infer that
he must have been going about his daily business with diligence and
efficiency, because he must have been digging deep, and not merely
scraping the surface, in order to strike against the treasure. It would
be a sad thing, if it were only in churches, in so-called holy places,
and on so-called religious occasions that we found God, and felt close
to him.
There is an unwritten saying of Jesus which never found its way
into any of the gospels, but which rings true: "Raise the stone and thou
shalt find me; cleave the wood and I am there." When the mason is
working on the stone, when the carpenter is working with the wood, Jesus
Christ is there. True happiness, true satisfaction, the sense of God,
the presence of Christ are all to be found in the day's work, when that
day's work is honestly and conscientiously done. Brother Lawrence, great
saint and mystic, spent much of his working life in the monastery
kitchen amidst the dirty dishes, and he could say, "I felt Jesus Christ
as close to me in the kitchen as ever I did at the blessed sacrament."
(ii) The lesson of this parable is, second, that it is worth any
sacrifice to enter the Kingdom. What does it mean to enter the Kingdom?
When we were studying the Lord's Prayer (Matthew 6:10),
we found that we could say that the Kingdom of God is a state of
society upon earth where God's will is as perfectly done as it is in
heaven. Therefore to enter the Kingdom is to accept and to do God's
will. So, then, it is worth anything to do God's will. Suddenly, as the
man discovered the treasure, there may flash upon us, in some moment of
illumination, the conviction of what God's will is for us. To accept it
may be to give up certain aims and ambitions which are very dear, to
abandon certain habits and ways of life which are very difficult to lay
down, to take on a discipline and self-denial which are by no means
easy, in a word, to take up our cross and follow after Jesus. But there
is no other way to peace of mind and heart in this life and to glory in
the life to come. It is indeed worth giving up everything to accept and
to do the will of God.
The Precious Pearl (Matthew 13:45-46)
13:45-46
"Again, the Kingdom of Heaven is like a merchant who was seeking goodly
pearls. When he had found a very valuable pearl, he went away and sold
everything he had, and bought it."
In the ancient world pearls had a very special place in men's
hearts. People desired to possess a lovely pearl, not only for its money
value, but for its beauty. They found a pleasure in simply handling it
and contemplating it. They found an aesthetic joy simply in possessing
and looking at a pearl. The main sources of pearls in those days were
the shores of the Red Sea and far-off Britain itself, but a merchant
would scour the markets of the world to find a pearl which was of
surpassing beauty. There are certain most suggestive truths hidden in
this parable.
(i) It is suggestive to find the Kingdom of Heaven compared to a
pearl. To the ancient peoples, as we have just seen, a pearl was the
loveliest of all possessions; that means that the Kingdom of Heaven is
the loveliest thing in the world. Let us remember what the Kingdom is.
To be in the Kingdom is to accept and to do the will of God. That is to
say, to do the will of God is no grim, grey, agonizing thing; it is a
lovely thing. Beyond the discipline, beyond the sacrifice, beyond the
self-denial, beyond the cross, there lies the supreme loveliness which
is nowhere else. There is only one way to bring peace to the heart, joy
to the mind, beauty to the life, and that is to accept and to do the
will of God.
(ii) It is suggestive to find that there are other pearls but
only one pearl of great price. That is to say, there are many fine
things in this world and many things in which a man can find loveliness.
He can find loveliness in knowledge and in the reaches of the human
mind, in art and music and literature and all the triumphs of the human
spirit; he can find loveliness in serving his fellow-men, even if that
service springs from humanitarian rather than from purely Christian
motives; he can find loveliness in human relationships. These are all
lovely, but they are all lesser loveliness. The supreme beauty lies in
the acceptance of the will of God. This is not to belittle the other
things; they too are pearls; but the supreme pearl is the willing
obedience which makes us friends of God.
(iii) We find in this parable the same point as in the previous
one but with a difference. The man who was digging the field was not
searching for treasure; it came on him all unaware. The man who was
searching for pearls was spending his life in the search.
But no matter whether the discovery was the result of a moment
or the result of a life-time's search, the reaction was the
same--everything had to be sold and sacrificed to gain the precious
thing. Once again we are left with the same truth--that, however a man
discovers the will of God for himself, whether it be in the lightning
flash of a moment's illumination or at the end of a long and conscious
search, it is worth anything unhesitatingly to accept it.
The Catch And The Separation (Matthew 13:47-50)
13:47-50
"Again, the Kingdom of Heaven is like a net which was cast into the sea,
and which gathered all kinds of things. When it was full, they hauled
it up on to the shore, and sat down, and collected the good contents
into containers, but threw the useless contents away. So it will be at
the end of the age. The angels will come, and they will separate the
evil from the righteous, and they will cast them into the furnace of
fire. There will be weeping and gnashing of teeth there."
It was the most natural thing in the world that Jesus should
use illustrations from fishing when he was speaking to fishermen. It was
as if he said to them: "Look how your daffy work speaks to you of the
things of heaven."
In Palestine there were two main ways of fishing. One was with the casting-net, the amphiblestron (Greek #293).
It was a hand-net which was cast from the shore. Thomson describes the
process: "The net is in shape like the top of a bell-tent, with a long
cord fastened to the apex. This is tied to the arm, and the net so
folded that, when it is thrown, it expands to its utmost circumference,
around which are strung beads of lead to make it drop suddenly to the
bottom. Now, see the actor; half bent, and more than half naked, he
keenly watches the playful surf, and there he spies his game tumbling in
carelessly toward him. Forward he leaps to meet it. Away goes the net,
expanding as it flies, and its leaded circumference strikes the bottom
ere the silly fish is aware that its meshes have closed around him. By
the aid of the cord the fishermen leisurely draws up the net and the
fish with it. This requires a keen eye, an active frame, and great skill
in throwing the net. He, too, must be patient, watchful, wide awake,
and prompt to seize the exact moment to throw."
The second way of fishing was with the drag-net, the sagene (Greek #4522),
what we would call the seine net or the trawl. This is the way referred
to in this parable. The seine net was a great square net with cords at
each corner, and weighted so that, at rest, it hung, as it were, upright
in the water. When the boat began to move, the net was drawn into the
shape of a great cone and into the cone all kinds of fish were swept.
The net was then drawn to land, and the catch was separated. The
useless material was flung away; the good was put into containers. It
is interesting to note that sometimes the fish were put alive into
containers rifled with water. There was no other way to transport them
in freshness over any time or any distance.
There are two great lessons in this parable.
(i) It is in the nature of the drag-net that it does not, and
cannot, discriminate. It is bound to draw in all kinds of things in its
course through the water. Its contents are bound to be a mixture. If we
apply that to the Church, which is the instrument of God's Kingdom upon
earth, it means that the Church cannot be discriminative but is bound to
be a mixture of all kinds of people, good and bad, useless and useful.
There have always been two views of the Church--the exclusive
and the inclusive. The exclusive view holds that the Church is for
people who are good, people who are really and fully committed, people
who are quite different from the world. There is an attraction in that
view, but it is not the New Testament view, because, apart from anything
else, who is to do the judging, when we are told that we must not
judge? (Matthew 7:1 http://www.crossbooks.com/verse.asp?ref=Mt+7%3A1).
It is not any man's place to say who is committed to Christ and who is
not. The inclusive view feels instinctively that the Church must be open
to all, and that, like the drag-net, so long as it is a human
institution it is bound to be a mixture. That is exactly what this
parable teaches.
(ii) But equally this parable teaches that the time of
separation will come when the good and the bad are sent to their
respective destinations. That separation, however, certain as it is, is
not man's work but God's. Therefore it is our duty to gather in all who
will come, and not to judge or separate, but to leave the final judgment
to God.
Old Gifts Used In A New Way (Matthew 13:51-52)
13:51-52 Jesus
said, "Have you understood an these things?" They said to him: "Yes." He
said to them: "That is why every scribe, who has been instructed in the
Kingdom of Heaven, is like a householder who brings out of his
treasure-house things new and old."
When Jesus had finished speaking about the Kingdom, he asked
his disciples if they had understood. And they had understood, at least
in part. Then Jesus goes on to speak about the scribe, instructed in the
Kingdom of Heaven, bringing out of his treasure-house things old and
new. What Jesus is in effect saying is this: "You are able to
understand, because you came to me with a fine heritage. You came with
all the teaching of the law and the prophets. A scribe comes to me with a
lifetime of study of the law and of all its commandments. That
background helps you to understand. But after you have been instructed
by me, you have the knowledge, not only of the things you used to know,
but of things you never knew before, and even the knowledge which you
had before is illuminated by what I have told to you."
There is something very suggestive here. For it means that Jesus
never desired or intended that any man should forget all he knew when
he came to him; but that he should see his knowledge in a new light and
use it in a new service. When he does that, what he knew before becomes a
greater treasure than ever it was.
Every man comes to Jesus Christ with some gift and with some
ability. Jesus does not ask that he should give up his gift. So many
people think that when a man declares for Christ he must give things up
and concentrate upon the so-called religious things. But a scholar does
not give up his scholarship when he becomes a Christian; rather he uses
it for Christ. A business man need not give up his business; rather he
should run it as a Christian would. One who can sing, or dance, or act,
or paint need not give up his art, but must use his art as a Christian
would. The sportsman need not give up his sport, but must play as a
Christian would. Jesus did not come to empty life but to fill it, not to
impoverish life but to enrich it. Here we see Jesus telling men, not to
abandon their gifts, but to use them even more wonderfully in the light
of the knowledge which he has given them.
The Barrier Of Unbelief (Matthew 13:53-58)
13:53-58 When
Jesus had concluded these parables, he left there. He went into his
native place and he taught them in their synagogue. His teaching was
such that they were astonished and said, "Where did this man get this
wisdom and these powers? Is not this the son of the carpenter? Is not
his mother caned Mary? And are James and Joseph and Simon and Judas not
his brothers? Where did he get all these things?" And they were offended
at him. Jesus said to them, "A prophet is not without honour except in
his own native place and in his own family." And he did not do many
deeds of power there because of their unbelief.
It was natural that at some time Jesus should pay a visit to
Nazareth where he had been brought up. And yet it was a brave thing to
do. The hardest place for a preacher to preach is the church where he
was a boy; the hardest place for a doctor to practise is the place where
people knew him when he was young.
But to Nazareth Jesus went. In the synagogue there was no
definite person to give the address. Any distinguished stranger present
might be asked by the ruler of the synagogue to speak, or anyone who had
a message might venture to give it. There was no danger that Jesus
would not be given the opportunity to speak. But when he did speak, all
that he encountered was hostility and incredulity. They would not listen
to him because they knew his father and his mother and his brothers and
his sisters. They could not conceive that anyone who had lived among
them had any right to speak as Jesus was speaking. The prophet, as so
often happens, had no honour in his own country; and their attitude to
him raised a barrier which made it impossible for Jesus to have any
effect upon them.
There is a great lesson here. In any church service the
congregation preaches more than half the sermon. The congregation brings
an atmosphere with it. That atmosphere is either a barrier through
which the preacher's word cannot penetrate; or else it is such an
expectancy that even the poorest sermon becomes a living flame.
Again, we should not judge a man by his background and his
family connections, but by what he is. Many a message has been killed
stone dead, not because there was anything wrong with it; but because
the minds of the hearers were so prejudiced against the messenger that
it never had a chance.
When we meet together to listen to the word of God, we must come
with eager expectancy, and must think, not of the man who speaks, but
of the Spirit who speaks through him.
-Barclay's Daily Study Bible (NT)