- Hard Soil. The first soil represents hearers of the Word who have hardened hearts. Just as a seed cannot penetrate hardened soil, when seeds of truth hit a hardened heart, they bounce right off, never taking root. Satan’s tactics cause hearers to ignore and reject the message just as the seeds that fall on the road fail to take root, displaying there is no understanding.
- Rocky soil. Some of the soil in the area where Jesus lived was very shallow. The soil may have looked promising on top, but it was just a thin layer over limestone bedrock. This soil would let seeds get in and be warmed by the sun, but when the plant’s roots reached bedrock, they had nowhere else to go. The first hint of foul weather caused them to wither. The people whose hearts are represented by the shallow soil hear God’s Word and “immediately receive it with joy” (v. 20), but they have just a superficial acceptance and belief, and they quickly fall away.
- Thorn-infested soil. Some seeds cast by the farmer began to take root. The plants may have looked healthy for a while, but then thorns grew up and surrounded them, choking them out and depriving them of receiving the nourishment from the soil. Jesus used this soil to illustrate those who hear His word, but instead of letting that word take hold in their lives through a firm devotion to it, they let other things steal their focus: “the worries of this age and the deceitfulness of wealth choke the word, and it becomes unfruitful” (v. 22).
- Grow. If you’ve been distracted or challenged in your walk with Christ, renew your commitment to Him. Ask God to work in your life and help you produce fruit for Him.
- Share. Identify opportunities God gives you during the week to “sow seeds” in the lives of others. Pray for boldness and take advantage of the opportunities God places in front of you.
- Care. As you share Christ, “work the soil.” Do more than speak words; show care and concern. Display the love of Christ in your actions; invest time in someone’s life and let God use your words and actions to prepare the soil.
Video:
Bucket Lists - Checklists of activities or tasks people want to complete before
they die.
Forbes magazine
recently published an article titled “The Best Bucket List Experience to Plan
for 2021 and 2022.” The article suggested that as travel becomes easier and
safer again, people will be wanting to travel. Here are some of the bucket-list
trips suggested:
- Joining a cattle drive in Montana, where you
ride with professional wranglers to round up cattle.
- Book a private island in Queensland off the
coast of Australia, where you’ll have a personal chef and private masseuse.
- Travel to Prince Edward Island for the annual
oyster festival.
- Ride the world’s largest ferris wheel in Dubai,
that takes you to a height of 820 feet for a birds-eye view of the city.
- Go camel trekking in Israel, where you ride in
the desert before dawn.
Say: Everyone’s bucket
list is different.
What's on your bucket list?
Matthew 13:3-8
Then he told them many
things in parables, saying: “Consider the sower who went out to sow. As he sowed, some seed fell along the path,
and the birds came and devoured them. Other seed fell on rocky ground where it
didn’t have much soil, and it grew up quickly since the soil wasn’t deep. But
when the sun came up, it was scorched, and since it had no root, it withered
away. Other seed fell among thorns, and the thorns came up and choked it. Still
other seed fell on good ground and produced fruit: some a hundred, some sixty,
and some thirty times what was sown.”
How do you know when
the opportunity is right to share the gospel?
1.
Share the message of Christ wherever you
are.
Why is it important to
share the gospel as widely as possible?
Jesus provided a model
for us to follow. We can seize the opportunities before us to be proactive and
intentional in how and when we share. Our proactive attitude
includes prayer: praying for open eyes to see the opportunities God has given
us, praying for how we “sow the seed,” and praying for those with whom we
share. Wherever we are, we should pray daily and expect God to provide
opportunities for us to be His messengers. Though we cannot control others’
responses to what they hear, our chief concern and motivation should be that
they hear the gospel.
Matthew 13:18-22
“So listen to the
parable of the sower: When anyone hears the word about the kingdom and doesn’t
understand it, the evil one comes and snatches away what was sown in his heart.
This is the one sown along the path. And the one sown on rocky ground—this is
one who hears the word and immediately receives it with joy. But he has no root
and is short-lived. When distress or persecution comes because of the word,
immediately he falls away. Now the one sown among the thorns—this is one who
hears the word, but the worries of this age and the deceitfulness of wealth
choke the word, and it becomes unfruitful.”
What are some things
that may prevent us from having gospel conversations with people?
2.
Not everyone is transformed by the
gospel.
·
Those who refuse the gospel completely or will
not allow it to take root in their lives will not realize the spiritual fruit
it is able to produce in their lives; the issue is the quality of the soil.
How do you typically
respond when a person is not receptive to hearing the gospel?
How can we respond when
someone rejects our gospel presentation?
Matthew 13:23
23 “But the one sown on
the good ground—this is one who hears and understands the word, who does
produce fruit and yields: some a hundred, some sixty, some thirty times what
was sown.”
Why is important to
share Christ in all situations, but leave the results to God?
Those who accept the
message and follow Christ experience abundance.
·
God does a mighty work of grace in the lives of
those who receive His Word and engage with Him in it.
When have you
experienced the gospel landing in good soil?
How can this parable help us persist in evangelism?
The point of Jesus’
parable is to show us that we can all hear the same gospel and word from God,
but we don’t all respond the same way. Unfortunately, too often we treat this
parable as a personality quiz by which we label others. For example. we might
see how someone responds to the gospel and think, “Hoo, boy, he is rocky soil.”
And we leave it at that. We assume that if a person is rocky soil, he has
always been—and always will be—rocky soil. Therefore, we make no further
attempts to reach him for Christ.
Let me change that
faulty perception with another one of Jesus’ parables: And he told this
parable: “A man had a fig tree that was planted in his vineyard. He came
looking for fruit on it and found none. He told the vineyard worker, ‘Listen,
for three years I have come looking for fruit on this fig tree and haven’t
found any. Cut it down! Why should it even waste the soil?’ “But he replied to
him, ‘Sir, leave it this year also, until I dig around it and fertilize it.
Perhaps it will produce fruit next year, but if not, you can cut it down’”
(Luke 13:6-9).
Here’s an unfruitful
tree, but it’s significant what the vineyard worker did: HE WORKED ON THE SOIL!
We don’t look at our
own yards in the Spring and say with a sigh of resignation: “I’ve got weeds in
the flower bed and a dead spot in the grass. I’ll just learn to live with it.”
No, we fertilize and water. We dig and soften the soil. And amazingly, hard
soil is softened and grass grows. Weeds are pulled and flowers flourish.
Let’s apply the same
principle to those in our lives. Water their soil and soften their hearts with
gracious words and loving actions. Have ongoing conversations in which you can
be a faithful witness to the power of Christ over worries and His abundance over
worldly things. When you stay connected, investing in
their lives, God uses you to change the soil. Just as the soil in your
yard can be changed, the soul of a person can be changed.
So, keep sharing
Christ. And keep fertilizing.
Wrap It Up
If we’ve got a solid
bucket list, it’s likely we’ll never make it to the end before our lives are
over. But let’s make sure we keep sowing the seed of the gospel and keep that
first on our list of things to strive for.
Jesus’ explanation of
the Parable of the Sower highlights four different responses to the gospel. The
seed is “the word of the kingdom.” The hard ground represents someone who is
hardened by sin; he hears but does not understand the Word, and Satan plucks
the message away, keeping the heart dull and preventing the Word from making an
impression. The stony ground pictures a man who professes delight with the
Word; however, his heart is not changed, and when trouble arises, his so-called
faith quickly disappears. The thorny ground depicts one who seems to receive
the Word, but whose heart is full of riches, pleasures, and lusts; the things
of this world take his time and attention away from the Word, and he ends up
having no time for it. The good ground portrays the one who hears, understands,
and receives the Word—and then allows the Word to accomplish its result in his
life. The man represented by the “good ground” is the only one of the four who
is truly saved, because salvation’s proof is fruit (Matthew 3:7-8; 7:15-20).
To summarize the point of the Parable of the Sower: “A man’s reception of God’s Word is determined by the condition of his heart.” A secondary lesson would be “Salvation is more than a superficial, albeit joyful, hearing of the gospel. Someone who is truly saved will go on to prove it.” May our faith and our lives exemplify the "good soil" in the Parable of the Sower.
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