The Wheat and the Weeds: Matthew 13

Similar documents
Scripture: Matthew 13:24-30, 36-43

Lesson 3-5 Parable - Wheat and Weeds (Part 1)

Why would someone do such a thing? The victim would not reap what they sowed. They would reap what their enemy had sowed.

Seek First the Kingdom

Not of this World. Let s first read through the parable as recorded in Matthew the 13 th chapter. We will begin reading with verse 24.

Matthew 13:24-33 New Revised Standard Version June 10, 2018

How do we prepare for the end of the world?

Introduction. Jesus Parable of The Tares. Introduction. Introduction. Why Did Jesus Speak In Parables? Jesus Parable of The Tares

While everyone was asleep his enemy came and sowed weeds all through the wheat, and then went off (Mt 13:25). 16 th Sunday in Ordinary Time Cycle A

The Parable of the Wheat and the Weeds Pastor Dan Hiatt 11/8/15

Sermon by the Rev. Bollin M. Millner, Jr. Grace and Holy Trinity Church Richmond, Virginia Pentecost VII July 23, 2017

Red Chairables The Wheat and the Weeds Part 7 September 12, 2010

7th Sunday after Pentecost ELW Holy Communion Setting Ten Sunday, July 23, 2017

Teachings of the Teacher A study in the parables of Jesus

It all started with the disappearance of three teenagers. For 18 days, their families waited for

Title: Stay Out of the Weeds!

In the Parable of the Sower (Matthew 13:1-9) we learned that not all people react to the Word of the Kingdom in the same way:

Matthew 13:24-33 King James Version June 10, 2018

LESSON 3B WARNINGS. Did He Just Say That?

"I will open My mouth in parables; I will utter things kept secret from the foundation of the world."

The Red Letters Wheat and Tare April 19, 2015 Matthew 13:24-30, 37-43

The Wheat and the Weeds

THE DAY OF JUBILEE. Apostle Jacquelyn Fedor. Comment from the Author: In the account of the year of Jubilee in Leviticus 27: 24, the

The hard heart The emotional heart The worldly heart The Christian heart Matthew 13

What is the Kingdom of Heaven Like?

great multitudes gathered to Him, so that He got into a boat and sat down, and the whole multitude was standing on the beach.

Epiphany V Sermon I by Bishop Michael Hawkins. Why am I still an Anglican? Why bother? Why stick it

A Journey with Christ the Messiah The Parable of the Weeds Among the Wheat

Luke 17C. o To the Pharisees, Jesus described the way the kingdom would be established in Christ s first coming

GOD WITH US Part 8: JESUS

The Tares Among the Wheat.

Dealing with Weeds Matthew 13: Dr. Dan Ervin August 2, 2015

TO SERVE AND PROTECT. Genesis 2:15 Then the Lord God took the man and put him in the garden of Eden TO TEND (Abad) AND KEEP (Shamar) IT.

Matthew 13:24-30, 36-43

SCRIPTURE But when the grain had sprouted and produced a crop, then the tares also appeared. Matthew 13:26

The Wheat and the Tares

Introduction. The Story. The Interpretation

According to Matthew 13:1, when Jesus came out of the house where did He go?

Sermon, Matthew 13:24-30 January 15, 2017

The Story the Wheat and the Weeds (Luke 8:4-18)

Great Events of the New Testament

THE 5 PILLARS OF MATTHEW. 3.2 The Parable of the Tares (Matt 13, pt. 2)

Marlan Charles Anders

Parables of the Kingdom: Part 1 (Matthew 13:24-52)

LIKE FATHER, LIKE SONS: WHEAT AND TARE Published by Sowing the Word of God May 3, 2018

Series Revelation. This Message #24 Revelation 14:14-20

Before I start this Message on the Resurrection for Beginners I would like to ask you the listener or reader of this Message some questions?

Story of Weedy Fields Matthew 13:24-30, 36-43

This Message Parable of the Wheat and Weeds. Scripture Matthew 13:24-30; (Also Mark 4:26-29)

MATTHEW Chapter 13. On the same day Jesus went out of the house and sat by the sea. He sat in a boat, they stood on the shore

Matthew 19:23-24 (NKJV) 23

Go!!!! A Verse-by-Verse Study of the Book of Matthew. The Treasure Chest Matthew 13:24-58

is weeding. Now don t get me wrong, I love working outside but for many years, having to go through a garden to systematically uproot

Part Two: The Parable of the Weeds and The Parable of the Net

God of Abraham your father and the God of Isaac; the land on which you lie I will give to you and to your offspring;

My Garden Is Full of Weeds!

July 23, 2017 Seventh Sunday after Pentecost Corporate Confession and Absolution

3-9 1: Sower and 4 Soils Why Parables? Sower and 4 Soils Explained : Tares & Wheat : Mustard Seed 33 4: Woman & Leaven

Practical Christianity End-Time Bible Studies Country Living Wilderness Living

Meeting With Christ THE PARABLE OF THE TARES. The kingdom of God illustrated. Matthew 13:24-30

Wheat and Tares and the Dragnet Matthew 13:24-30, 36-43, (The following text is taken from a sermon preached by Gil Rugh.)

I. THE PARABLE OF THE WHEAT AND THE TARES (Matthew 13:24-30)

Matthew 13:24 Another parable put he forth unto them, saying, The kingdom of heaven is likened unto a man which sowed good seed in his field: 13:25

Weeping and Gnashing of Teeth The Rev d Jo Popham Twenty-Second Sunday after Pentecost November 13, 2011 Matthew 25:14-30

Statements Jesus made in the Gospels Concerning the End of Days and the Rapture of the Church

The Weeds and the Wheat Sermon by Rev. Peter Shidemantle June 3, 2018 Matthew 13:24-30, 36-43

: The Seed of the Word becomes the Son of The Kingdom. The Word of God is living and powerful - Heb. 4:12. God s Word is spirit and life John 6:63.

Kingdom of God Part 5 Steve Berger May 1, 2016

A Study On Jesus Christ as judge. See also Jn 5:27; Ac 10:42; Ac 17:31. See also Is 11:3 4; Mic 4:3; Jn 8:15 16; Ac 17:31; Re 19:11

We get impatient with hurdles, obstacle, interruptions, setbacks, delays, and slow progress.

II Peter 1:16-21 & 2:1

Episcopal Diocese of East Carolina

What s In Your Garden?

REVELATION. 1) Jesus is COMING To Conquer and take OVER all the kingdoms of the earth.

MATT , 36-43: THE PARABLE OF GOD S HARVEST (WHEAT AND TARES) [Chelmsford, 23 Sept 2012]

Kingdom Parables: Wheat & Tares

For the Matthew account he states many things unto them in parables, after He s given one.

The Talents April 30, 2017 Matthew 25:14-30 I invite you to open your Bibles to Matthew 25. If you can remember back as far as last week s message,

Seventh Sunday after Pentecost

No one has ever baptized themselves.

July 13, 2014 Bethlehem Lutheran Church, Thursdays at 10:00 AM Readings for 6th Sunday after Pentecost, July 20, 2014

These are the days of Elijah Declaring the Word of the Lord And these are the days Of Your servant Moses Righteousness being restored

The Final Judgment: As you think about the idea of what we typically refer to as Hell? How would you describe it?

THE CASE OF THE MYSTERIOUS HARVEST

Matthew. Chapter 25. Blue Letter Bible

1 Title: Judgment Text: Matt. 3:10-12 Date: August 14, 2011 Place: Decatur Church of God Theme: Packed Bags

CHAPTER 2:14-20 MEDIA REFERENCE NUMBER SM-304 AUGUST 1, 1998 THE TITLE OF THE MESSAGE: Salvation, By Faith or Works? - Part 1

Parables of God s Just Kingdom

Parables of God s Just Kingdom

General Background on Matthew: We continue reading from the gospel of Matthew. Matthew is believed to have been written around CE.

Discover the New Testament Ephesians 3 June 27, 2012 mediaatvictory.com/series/discoverthent

Lesson 1 31 October, The Kingdom Parables

Seventeenth Church of Christ, Scientist Chicago, Illinois USA Wednesday, December 7, 2016 Subject: Harmony Part 3: Seeing God with the eyes of a child

Thank you for downloading the CQ Rewind Summary Only Version!

The owner s servants came to him and said, Sir, didn t you sow good seed in your field? Where then did the weeds come from?

GEMS OF TRUTH. NUMBER 8 Feburary 10, 2012

Children of the Day Message by DD Adams 24 th SUNDAY AFTER PENTECOST Kemptown Providence U.M. Church November 19, 2017

Is there a Rapture? No at least not the one you see in movies and the headlines! Let's talk about it!

Read first paragraph Humans are social beings Thoughts?

QUESTION: Why does God allow people who fake being a Christian to keep doing it, and not be revealed?

Transcription:

The Wheat and the Weeds: Matthew 13 Stories are powerful tools to convey history, to teach, and to entertain. Stories carry moral lessons, persuasive arguments for a point of view and social coercion or change. We all tell many stories every day and every faith tradition has its stories. Pagan stories, Jewish stories, Hindu stories, Buddhist stories, Indigenous people stories, Muslim stories and yes, Christian stories. This summer I d like to explore some of those stories and lessons we might learn from them. We ll begin this month with stories Jesus told. Not the stories about Jesus but the stories, at least as recorded in the gospels, that Jesus told. In August I want to explore stories in the Buddhist tradition. Then in September we ll have a variety of stories. I d like to work with some of the stories Jesus told that may be less familiar or at least a different view than we might have heard before. You should be used to my tendency to go where no Unity minister has gone before. So we ll begin in chapter 13 of Matthew, verse 24. There are a number of stories or parables about sowing seeds. Here is the one I chose: He put before them another parable: "The kingdom of heaven may be compared to someone who sowed good seed in his field; but while everybody was asleep, an enemy came and sowed weeds among the wheat, and then went away. So when the plants came up and bore grain, then the weeds appeared as well. And the slaves of the householder came and said to him, "Master, did you not sow good seed in your field? Where, then, did these weeds come from?' He answered, "An enemy has done this.' The slaves said to him, "Then do you want us to go and gather them?' But he replied, "No; for in gathering the weeds you would uproot the wheat along with them. Let both of them grow together until the harvest; and at harvest time I will tell the reapers, Collect the weeds first and bind them in bundles to be burned, but gather the wheat into my barn.' " Now before I begin interpreting and talking about this, we have to read a little further on. Jesus tells a couple more stories then something interesting happens down at verse 36. Then he left the crowds and went into the house. And his disciples approached him, saying, "Explain to us the parable of the weeds of the field." He answered, "The one who sows the good seed is the Son of Man; the field is 1

the world, and the good seed are the children of the kingdom; the weeds are the children of the evil one, and the enemy who sowed them is the devil; the harvest is the end of the age, and the reapers are angels. Just as the weeds are collected and burned up with fire, so will it be at the end of the age. The Son of Man will send his angels, and they will collect out of his kingdom all causes of sin and all evildoers, and they will throw them into the furnace of fire, where there will be weeping and gnashing of teeth. Then the righteous will shine like the sun in the kingdom of their Father. Let anyone with ears listen! So by Jesus explanation, he tells us the stories are not literal, they are metaphorical. This is fascinating because Unity s whole approach to the Bible is to read it as a metaphysical text; as a book with deeper meanings. Now we understand that the gospels, including Matthew, were written many years after Jesus lived. So they are based on recollections and they are biased by the author and his agenda or intended audience. There are more places in the gospels in which the disciples come back to Jesus later and say, Huh? We didn t quite get that story. Putting all that aside, this is not a parable I have ever heard a Unity minister speak on. Maybe it is the devil, the furnace of fire and the gnashing of teeth. How positive thinking does that sound? So, of course, I am intrigued about what I can learn here. This is all about seeds, so what does the Metaphysical Bible Dictionary say about seeds? They are the creative idea inherent in the Word. The seed that is the word of God is the real man, not the external thinking personality that has consciousness of separation but the internal Spirit center. When Jesus begins to explain his own story he says, The one who sows the good seed is the Son of Man; the field is the world, and the good seed are the children of the kingdom; the weeds are the children of the evil one, Let s start there. Jesus is talking about himself as the Son of Man but we interpret Jesus as representing our Christ Consciousness, our true nature, the internal Spirit center from Charles Fillmores definition of seed. The good seed are those thoughts and ideas arising from our Christ consciousness or from being centered in our spiritual nature. The weeds are those thoughts and ideas that arise from the external thinking personality that has consciousness of separation. How do those weeds get in there? 2

The beginning verse reads while everybody was asleep, an enemy came and sowed weeds among the wheat. Most people sleep at night, so I looked up darkness. The Revealing Word says, The ignorance of the sense man; the absence of Truth (light) in consciousness. Undeveloped capacity. I am compelled to tell you this is inconsistent with how Fillmore defines sleep in the Revealing Word but I reserve the right to bring my own understanding to interpretation and I encourage you to do the same. So we all lapse into sense consciousness, not because we are bad people but because we still have more undeveloped capacity to grow into. Now when Jesus explains this story he says the weeds sown by the enemy were sown by the devil. Fillmore says the Devil is a state of consciousness adverse to the divine good. The devils we encounter are fear, anger, jealousy and other similar negative traits, and they are in ourselves. There is no devil out there! A part of us wants to have something outside ourselves to blame for our own error thoughts. Another part of us knows it is our own thinking and disowns the parts of ourselves that fall into negativity. It is our shadow self. The part we like to hide or ignore or bury. We will go to extraordinary lengths to avoid looking at our shadow self, calling the devil the devil within us and going about bringing it into the light of compassion and love. In the definition of darkness, Fillmore says it comes from a lack of love. When we are in fear, anger and jealousy, we don t love God or ourselves. So here s what I have so far in the story: When we are centered in our Christ consciousness, we create the divine good that is our true nature. When we lapse into sense consciousness, a belief in separation and those negative traits, we create that which is adverse to our own divine good. What about the end; the time of angels and the clearing out and the burning and gnashing of teeth? Yikes! Can we just skip this part? No! It s the process so let s just go there. The disciples talk and write about the end because they thought it was pretty soon. Frankly, they hoped it was pretty soon. They were a little upset that this Messiah that they had waited for turned out to be a teacher and a wayshower but NOT a RESCUER! For me, one of the lessons Unity teaches that makes it the least popular is that there is no rescue from ourselves except by 3

ourselves. There are lots of paths, lots of practices and an entire Universe of energy and wisdom available, but none of it works unless we utilize it. Is the end the end of an individual s life or the end of the world? I don t think so. The end of an age, for me, is a turning point. It is the point at which I become aware of new insights that radically change how I live. Angels are messengers from God or the awakenings and new wisdom revealed and sent when we are ready for the turning point. So why can t we just sort stuff out along the way? Why do we have to wait until the end to divide the wheat from the weeds? My sense about the uprooting the wheat with the weeds is that until we reach a point of maturity, we can t discern which thoughts are contributing to which experiences. We can t always tell the weeds from the wheat as seedlings and until we have established, mature spiritual practices and see the fruit or wheat of that, we may be throwing out ideas and practices that are actually helpful. When will it be the end? When the angels and insights arrive. Jesus says, they will collect out of his kingdom all causes of sin and all evildoers, and they will throw them into the furnace of fire. Fillmore says this of fire: It symbolizes cleansing and purification. Material Fire is the symbol; and the fire of Spirit is the reality. The whole Universe is alive with a divine, living, spiritual energy that consumes all the dross of sense and materiality. It is a fire that burns eternally. Because this is true, some have assumed that disobedient, sinful persons are to live forever in everlasting torment. But if the fire is eternal, the dross is not, and when error is consumed the burning stops. The fire consumes only when it meets anything unlike itself. In purified man it is manifested as his eternal life. I love the imagery of The whole Universe is alive with a divine, living, spiritual energy. This aliveness is what I step into when I am ready to transform my life and allow the sense consciousness, the sense of separation to be purified. I choose this! It is not what happens TO me but what happens through me when I am ready. What about the weeping and gnashing of teeth? Oh that. Let me ask you a question. When change and transformation comes, how many of us go willingly? Even when we identify changes in habits and thinking that are for our highest good, how many of us let our attachments to the old ways go 4

without a little weeping and gnashing of teeth? It is being human. It is becoming more of our spiritual self. One of my favorite country songs is about going through hell. And it says, When you re going through hell, keep on moving; don t slow down, walk right through it. When we are going through the purification of transformation, just keep going. It can be a time of depression, a time in rehab, a physical healing or a time of spiritual wilderness. It is a process that leads to more light in our consciousness and more of our divine good manifesting. And don t be afraid to reach out to your spiritual community for support as you walk through it. Not only is Spirit available, God expressing as each of us is available. When we talk about more light, we find ourselves in the last sentences of Jesus explanation. Then the righteous will shine like the sun in the kingdom of their Father. Our Christ light shines so brightly it is like the sun. That is the magnificence that is our true nature. The Wheat and the Weeds was a story the disciples didn t understand right away and one we may avoid. Not everyone is at the point of having ears to hear. But this is the lesson for me: When we are centered in our Christ consciousness, we create the divine good that is our true nature. When we lapse into sense consciousness, a belief in separation and those negative traits, we create that which is adverse to our own divine good. Yet, we all reach turning points in our lives; we receive insights and revelations that will transform us. We step into the purifying energy that is alive in our Universe at all times and willingly or unwillingly, the weight of that which is unlike our true nature is released. The magnificence of our Christ light is liberated and we appear as we were created to be: the Light of the World. Jesus was a story teller, a teacher, and a model for how to practice what he taught. Yet it is only by personally accessing our own wisdom; making our own choices; that we can live the truth of the stories he told. Then the righteous will shine like the sun in the kingdom. 5