Matthew 13 24-30 notes 2005

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It Just Doesn't Work That Way
Sermon by Johnny Dean

Pentecost 9 - Matthew 13 : 24-30 (36-43)

I have to admit that I didn’t exactly look forward with eager anticipation to the prospect of planting a garden this year. It’s the first garden we’ve planted in several years, and my track record with gardens is not what anyone would rate as successful. Oh, I can usually manage to grow tomatoes and okra, the low maintenance vegetables. You just dig some holes, plant the seed or set out the young plants, pour a little Miracle Grow around them, and wait for them to grow. It you didn’t have the foresight to put tomato cages around the plants when you set them out, sooner or later you’ll have to figure out some way to keep the tomatoes off the ground. That usually means driving stakes into the ground beside the plant and tying the plant to the stakes. Other than that, there’s not a lot of work involved, unless you just don’t like for grass to grow between the tomato plants. You just have to wait until the tomatoes are ripe enough to pick and harvest them. Not so with the other stuff.

Like peas, for example. You have to keep the weeds from growing with your pea vines or the weeds will choke the pea vines until they die. But what if the weed looks a little bit like the pea vine? Now, those of you who are experienced gardeners probably have no trouble at all differentiating between a pea vine and a morning glory. But for the casual gardener, especially one who is "not from around here" and therefore not accustomed to finding morning glories growing wild everywhere, as if someone sneaked in and planted them when you weren’t looking, it can be a problem. Did you know that people back in West Tennessee actually TRY to get morning glories to grow? You consider morning glories weeds. Back home in Tennessee people call them flowers!

Something like that is at work in the parable Jesus tells his followers in our gospel text for today. "There was this farmer," Jesus says, "who sowed good seed in his field. Later that day, after darkness had fallen and everyone was asleep, one of the farmer’s enemies came and sowed weeds among the wheat, and then went away. When the plants grew large enough to begin producing grain, the field hands spotted the weeds growing with the wheat. And they went to the farmer and said, ‘What’s up with the weeds? We thought you were just growing wheat here.’ The farmer replied, ‘Do you think I’m foolish enough to PLANT weeds in my wheat field? Obviously someone planted these weeds here to ruin my crop, probably at night when everyone was asleep.’ ‘So what do you want us to do about it?’ asked the field hands. ‘Should we pull up all the weeds?’ ‘No, no, we don’t want to do that,’ said the farmer. ‘The roots of the weeds are probably tangled with the roots of the wheat, and you would pull up too many stalks of wheat to get rid of a few weeds. Let’s just wait until harvest time to separate them.’"

You see, these weren’t just any old weeds growing with the wheat. The original Greek manuscripts identified them as darnel, a weed that looks very much like a stalk of wheat as it’s growing. The only difference is the darnel doesn’t produce anything. So the only safe time to separate the weeds from the wheat would be at the harvest. At least, that’s what the farmer said.

But what kind of farmer is this? Is this the same farmer we talked about last week, the one who recklessly wasted his seed, throwing it in all directions? There was a lot of waste – remember? - a lot of failure as seed fell among thorns and rocks and got eaten by hungry birds. Now there seems to be failure again as weeds grow with his wheat.

"Somebody must have sneaked in and planted all these weeds?" I don’t think so!

And then, when one of his hired hands suggests pulling up the weeds, the farmer protests, "No, no! Can’t do that! Wouldn’t be prudent, you know. Just let them grow together. We’ll sort it all out come harvest time."

And Jesus says the Kingdom of God is like that?

This, then, is a parable about the church. Now, there are two predominant reasons modern people give for not being Christian, not associating with the church. Excuse number one: people in the church are just as rotten as everybody else in the world, a statement which is usually followed by the citation of some sin which they feel fairly certain they have not committed themselves, like racism or that age-old favorite hypocrisy, and everyone KNOWS the church is just full of those kind of sinners. Excuse number 2: With so much suffering and evil in the world, who could possibly believe in a righteous God? Walter Brueggemann has written that this is the most powerful argument against the church today. In his commentary, The Message of the Psalms, Dr. Brueggemann writes, "If God is powerful AND good, how can there be evil in the world? If the question is posed in this way, religion can offer no adequate logical response. Logically one must compromise either God’s power or God’s love, either saying that evil exists because God is not powerful enough to overrule it, or because God is not loving enough to use God’s power in this way." If God or God’s church could just clean up the act, think of all the morally sensitive people that we could get to come to church!

But you know what they would find here? Things are in just as big a mess in the church as they are in the farmer’s wheat field! Saints and sinners share the same pew, and how can you tell just by looking at them which is which? It doesn’t work that way, does it?

And Jesus says the kingdom of heaven is sort of like that?
There is so much messiness in the church! Jesus told us to make disciples of all nations, and look who showed up asking Philip for baptism in the middle of the desert! The invitation to the table was issued and look who came to the party! When God goes sowing, or sending out party invitations, or blessing, or calling, it looks like God doesn’t know where to stop!
But separation of the weeds from the wheat is God’s job, not ours. And it appears that God has a pretty high tolerance for waste and messiness in the church. God is willing to allow a good many bad seeds to sprout among the good. And sometimes, especially if we have difficulty telling the difference between a morning glory and a pea vine, we are the last ones to know the good from the bad.

Now, I’m not saying this parable is ONLY about the church. I think it applies also to the world we live in, the mixed quality of life in God’s garden. God created the world and said, "Hey now! That’s good! That’s real good, even if I do say so myself!" So what’s up with all these weeds? Why do bad things happen to good people and good things happen to bad people? Why do the wicked seem to flourish and prosper and the righteous struggle to make it from payday to payday? What are these weeds doing in here amongst the wheat? Did God plant them, or did the Devil sneak in when God was asleep?

We can laugh at the farmer’s claim that an enemy planted weeds in his field, but it’s not funny when the weeds spring up in OUR garden, is it? When cancer cells spread and good cells starve in the body, when defenseless students are gunned down by classmates in a place where they were supposed to be safe from harm, we want to know, "What’s up with these weeds, Lord? We thought you planted good seed here."

In his Pulitzer Prize winning novel, The Gulag Archipelago, the great author, Alexander Solzhenitsyn, says, "If only there were evil people somewhere insidiously committing evil deeds, and it were necessary only to separate them from the rest of us and destroy them. But the line dividing good and evil cuts through the heart of every human being."

She was the church organist, the mother of two beautiful children. Her father called me and gave me the news. "We’ve had to have her committed to the mental ward at Baptist Hospital. She was okay as long as she was taking her medicine. But she didn’t think she needed it any more, so she stopped taking it last week. Please go up and see her. We told them it was okay to let you in." I was just a seminary student, a minister in training, not a psychiatrist. I didn’t want to go. I didn’t know what I could say that would make any difference. But I was her pastor. As I entered the room, I saw her huddled over in the corner, gazing off into space, her eyes hauntingly empty. I called her name softly, not wanting to startle her, but got no response. I walked over and knelt in front of her, placing my hand gently on her shoulder. She looked at me then, but gave no sign of recognition for a moment. Then she whispered, in a shaky voice, "Preacher, the bad people are winning, and there’s nothing I can do." I managed to make it all the way back to my car before I broke down in tears. And the next day the chairman of the elders said, "You need to tell her to find another church. We’ve got enough problems as it is." In other words, weed the garden, preacher. But which one do I pull out? They both look the same. What a mess!
And what a mystery is this thing called church. What’s the farmer going to do about that messy field? How does he ever expect to sort it all out? Aren’t those weeds going to do a lot of damage to the healthy wheat if he just lets them grow there until the harvest? What if the bad people win? We won’t know until the harvest. But isn’t that wasteful? Isn’t that risky? What kind of way is this to run a farm? We want things to be neater, black and white, cut and dried, infinitely more predictable. We don’t want to wait until the harvest. We want to know now!

We would like for things to be neater, more orderly. But in the kingdom of God, it just doesn’t work that way. Because God is in charge of the garden, and God will decide when it’s time to separate the weeds from the wheat. Speaking as one who sometimes doesn’t know the difference between a morning glory and a pea vine, I am so thankful that God spares us from making that decision. AMEN


Johnny Dean, Staff, 1999

The Wheat Among The Weeds
Sermon by MARC KOLDEN

Pentecost 9 - Matthew 13 : 24-30 (36-43)

Our gospel passage today is this peculiar parable of Jesus about the wheat and the weeds. Jesus says that the kingdom of heaven (that is, the rule of God) is like this: A man went out in his field and sowed (by hand, of course, in those days) the good seed that he had saved from the previous year's crop. It was sown all over, not in neat rows or spaced evenly. And since nearly 2,000 years ago there were no chemical fertilizers or insecticides, weeds grew up with the wheat: worthless weeds that competed for the soil's moisture and nutrients -- the work of an enemy of the farmer as well as his crop.

While it is not obvious in English, the biblical word that Jesus uses for this particular weed describes an especially noxious weed that yet looks a lot like wheat at first, so that both the weed and the wheat must grow for some time before one can be certain which shoots are weeds. That's why, when the farmer's servants come and ask if they should pull up the weeds, the farmer says, "No, because they've been growing together so long that their roots are intertwined so that in pulling up the weeds you would pull up most of the wheat, too. Let them grow together until the harvest, when everything has to be pulled up anyway. Then we'll use the weeds for fuel and save the wheat in the storage barn."

If we can put ourselves back into a pre-modern mindset, we can understand this sort of common-sense story in terms of farming. But Jesus took this familiar picture and used it to talk about the rule of God. So, if we are to understand this parable as God's word for today, we have to see that the farmer's words and actions are those of God and the wheat and the weeds describe people in the world.

If we are Christians, if we are God's people, then we are the wheat, planted from the good seed (In baptism! See Romans 6:5, where the word translated "united" is literally "planted" with Christ in death by baptism), but living right next to, surrounded by, noxious weeds that threaten to choke us off. Christians are here portrayed as a minority in a hostile world. So, when we hear the words of Jesus to let both the weeds and the wheat grow together, that's not good news. We want our vindication -- our salvation -- to come sooner.

But, how do we even know for sure that we are wheat? Can we be so certain that if the weeds were pulled up, if sinners were to be gathered and thrown away right now, we wouldn't be doomed? In that case, the farmer's word to let the weed and the wheat grow together would be good news, allowing time for repentance. Or, even if we can rightly say that we believe in Jesus, that we have been baptized into his church and saved by his blood, that we are wheat, in other words -- even then, pulling up the weeds jeopardizes the wheat. Getting rid of people who don't seem to be Christians might in fact get rid of some Christians at the same time. Maybe for us Jesus' words about letting the wheat and the weeds grow together until the harvest are wise and good words. You cannot really tell which is which until the end.

There are several obvious implications of all this. God is patient; we should not judge too soon. Salvation is by grace through faith, not by accomplishments. Righteousness is not visible; God's ways and ours are not necessarily the same. Jesus is portrayed over and over in the New Testament as reaching out to all sorts of people: tax collectors, lepers, foreigners, all those called "least." Our task is to go and make disciples, to proclaim the gospel to all people, not to sit in judgment over those who are not like us.

This is hard to manage sometimes. We want to know now, especially about ourselves. We who are faithful want vindication now because we fear we might lose faith -- especially as Christians become more and more of a minority. But the parable tells us that God doesn't judge now, lest in gathering up the weeds the wheat might get rooted up, too.

Let's try a more modern example. In World War II Hitler's army overran France and established a Nazi government there that virtually wiped out any sort of French nation or government. There was a French government in exile in England, but in France itself there was only a small group of people in the resistance. They were a hopeless and nearly powerless minority, praying for help, but the answer seemed always to be "No." What should they do? Would there ever be a France again? Should they still be loyal, should they still cling to their own nation?

Their struggle both as resistance fighters and in wondering what in the world the outcome would be went on for several years. Finally, this modern-day parable was worked out by force. The Allied armies liberated France and drove the Nazis into retreat and eventual surrender. And as this happened, the faithful were seen! The members of the resistance who had not cooperated with the Nazis rose up. And others of less faith or courage followed these loyalists, so France could be reestablished.

Of course, this is a secular example, but that is exactly what Jesus was using also. Perhaps we can see ourselves, members of Christ's church, as those who now need to struggle to remain faithful so that others too may see our faith and take heart. If people see only atheism and evil in the world, they will despair. Cynicism can be contagious; but so can faith and hope. God needs us as a faithful minority for the sake of the world.

We live by faith now, in any case, not by sight. We cannot know with certainty now either about our own righteousness or that of others. We live now by faith in the word of God and by hope in God's promises. We expect that God will keep the promise made in Jesus: let all grow together and at the harvest the wheat will be gathered into the safety of God's shelter. This faith and hope -- and the prayer, witness and works of love that issue from them -- bear witness to our true citizenship, much like the witness of those members of the French resistance movement. (This modern parable also helps to shift our understanding away from the focus on evil weeds in the midst of the good wheat -- primarily a defensive way of looking at the mission of the church -- to emphasizing the presence of the wheat in the midst of the weeds -- possibly a more positive way of interpreting the present struggles of the church. Hence the title of the sermon, "The Wheat Among The Weeds" rather than the other way around.)

Such an outlook on life will permeate the way we approach each day. We will stay rooted in the soil of daily life, in our roles and duties as members of families and communities, as students and homemakers, as workers and retired persons, as citizens and taxpayers, as friends and neighbors and as church members. All this contributes to the harvest that God is preparing. God is patient, to allow more people to believe. Through us who believe God may work to reach those on the edges of faith, with whom our roots intertwine, so that they may hear God's call.

This is not a matter of superiority or pride for us, certainly, nor is it to be considered a burden placed on us by God. But just as God worked through the small nation of Israel and then through one man who was crucified, so now God works even through the church, even through us. In ourselves we are not rich or powerful or famous. No, as the apostle Paul writes, we are weak; we don't even know how to pray. But the Holy Spirit intercedes for us and helps us to pray and to do God's will (Romans 8:26).

Those whom God calls God also equips. Today, we are given the good word telling us that it is God's will that the wheat and the weeds grow together, so that all the wheat will be saved. [And we also get God's word made concrete and visible in the Lord's supper. Here the grains of wheat are formed into bread and with the word are Christ's body for us. And the wine from God's grapes with the word is Christ's blood for us. This is not the heavenly banquet yet, but a foretaste of the things to come. But it is a foretaste, it is a preview of the final invasion of God's liberating rule. As we eat this bread and drink this cup, we proclaim Christ's death until he comes again (1 Corinthians 11:26)].

In this way God builds us up in faith and hope, so that we might endure, and as we endure, others also may take courage and keep growing alongside until the harvest. For as it is written in 2 Peter 3:9: "The Lord is not slow about his promise, as some think of slowness, but is patient with you, not wanting any to perish, but all to come to repentance." Thanks be to God! Amen.


CHRIST OUR SURE FOUNDATION, MARC KOLDEN, CSS Publishing Company, 1995, 0-7880-0500-6

Getting Rid Of The Weeds
Sermon by King Duncan

Pentecost 9 - Matthew 13 : 24-30 (36-43)

Every gardener knows the importance of getting rid of the weeds. So does God. Many of us are uncomfortable with the idea of a God of Judgement, but sooner or later we have to answer the question: What about the weeds?

The recent trial of former Nazi officer Klaus Barbie brings to our consciousness the barbarity of that page in human history. The most infamous of the Nazi death camps was the one at Dachau. A monument there memorializes the victims of the Nazi terror. Alongside, a series of exhibits depict Nazi methods of annihilating the Jewsthe wretched detention camps, the extermination ovens, the mass graves. A huge sign proclaims in French, German, Russian and English: "Never Again!" We need to be reminded of Dachau. We need to keep thundering in every generation, "Never Again!"

We recoil at the idea of the judgement of God, but what about the weeds? What about the evil within the hearts of men and womenthe hatred, bigotry, envy, bitterness, lust, anger, greed, etc. A young woman in one of our public schools was asked to write an essay on Evolution. She wrote, "According to this theory man descended from the apes and has been descending ever since." There is some truth there. Apes are not capable of the extraodinary evil to which man will resort. What about the weeds?

Our concern this morning is not about the final judgement that Jesus describes when the wheat and the weeds will be separated. For most of us that matter has already been settled. By faith we have been saved. Our salvation, however, does not keep weeds out of the garden of our character. How do we deal with those weedsthose pesky personality defects, those murky moral letdowns, those tawdry times of ethical failure that keep us from being all that God intends us to be? For, you see, God has created us to be like a beautiful garden - bearing fruit whose taste is sweet and pleasing to the taste buds and bursting forth in blossoms whose beauty is pleasing to the eye. How do we get rid of the weeds and become the beautiful garden Christ intends us to be?

THE FIRST STEP IS TO RECOGNIZE HOW WEEDS GROW. THEY GROW WITHOUT ANY EFFORT ON OUR PART.

No one goes out and plants a weed. No one cultivates it, waters it, sees that it gets enough sunshine. Weeds require no labor. I may have shared with you before my own feelings about gardening. They are contained in a little poem that goes something like this: "To cultivate a garden takes a lot of labor; I would rather live next door to a gardener and cultivate my neighbor." Weeds require no labor. They just appear.

Weeds remind me of that mindless bit of philosophy so popular in our society today: "If it feels good do it." That is a certain recipe for failure. If we did only what felt good to us we would be physical, mental, moral and spiritual wrecks. The things worth having in life require effort. One of the most dangerous heresies of this sort is the idea that love is something that comes naturally. As Debbie Boone sang a few years ago in YOU LIGHT UP MY LIFE, "How can anything that feels this good be so wrong?" Mature young people understand that love is a commitment. It is much more than a feeling. Real love takes work. It involves the willingness to be there in good times or bad, for better or for worse.

Beware of anything in life that requires no commitment on your part. You are probably dealing with a weed. That is the sinister danger behind gamblingthe illusion that great riches can be yours with little effort. It is also part of the psychology of drugs. Why face your problems? You can escape from them with an artificial euphoria by simply taking a tiny pill. Illicit sex can have the same appeal. A few hours in a motel is different than having to live with someone day in and day out. How do you get rid of the weeds? You begin by recognizing how weeds grow. They grow without effort.

YOU GET RID OF WEEDS, IN THE SECOND PLACE, BY RECOGNIZING WHAT IT TAKES TO GROW A BEAUTIFUL GARDENA VISION, A PLAN, AND A COMMITMENT TO CULTIVATE IT.

There are some people who take better care of their lawns than they do their lives. Somehow they do not see that the same principles are involved in both tasks.

IN ORDER TO HAVE A BEAUTIFUL LAWN OR GARDEN YOU BEGIN WITH A MENTAL IDEA OF WHAT YOU HOPE TO ACHIEVE. You map it out in your mind's eye. You visualize the finished product the roses and the begonias, the dogwoods and the maples, the hedges and the walkways. Do you have that same clearcut vision concerning your life? Successful people almost always do.

Motivational people know the power of visualization. They will tell you about a skinny, scrawny black youngster who one day heard a coach say, "You can be what you make up your mind to be. God will help you." Afterwards this youngster came up to the coach and declared, "I've decided what I want to bethe fastest man in the world." The coach said, "Son, that's a great dream but there is one problem. Dreams have a way of floating high in the sky and drifting around like clouds. A dream never becomes a reality unless you have the courage to build a ladder to your dream." He explained to the youngster that his dream would take determination, dedication and discipline. Jesse Owens listened to the words of that coach that day and was faithful to his dream, and at the 1936 Olympics in Germany he proved himself to be the fastest man in the world. He won four gold metals and embarrassed Adolph Hitler in his own home town. A beautiful garden begins with a vision, a dream, an inner picture of what you can accomplish with God's help.

A BEAUTIFUL GARDEN ALSO REQUIRES A PLAN. There was once a great Quaker leader by the name of Rufus Jones. Jones wrote and published one book a year for over fifty years. He did this while attending countless meetings, making frequent speeches, editing a magazine and taking care of countless other chores that his position required. Someone once asked him how under these circumstances he found the time to write so many books he answered, "I wrote my books on Tuesdays." Throughout his career he set aside Tuesdays as his one "free" day accepting no appointments that could be avoided. He began after breakfast and wrote until dark. He might be thinking about his next project all week long, but he did not put it on paper until Tuesday. By following that simple plan he left behind a great body of work.

You have heard it before because it is true: Those who fail to plan, plan to fail. Jesus talked about the foolishness of those who build towers without first sitting down and figuring the cost. Successful living requires that we give some thought to the future. We have a vision of the beautiful garden we hope to be. Now we sit down and make a plan. What would I have to do to make my dream a reality?

Of course, a meaningful plan for our lives will include all of eternity. There is an old story about a court jester who was once given a wand by the nobleman he served. "Keep this," said the nobleman, until you find a greater fool than yourself." The jester put away the wand and kept it for many years. One day the nobleman lay dying. Calling the jester to his side he said, "I am going on a long journey." The jester asked, "Where to?" The nobleman shrugged his shoulders. "For how long?" asked the jester. "Forever," replied the nobleman weakly. "What provisions have you made for your journey?" asked the jester. "None," answered the nobleman. "Then," said the jester, "Take this," said the jester handing the nobleman his wand. "For you are a greater fool than I."

A BEAUTIFUL GARDEN REQUIRES A VISION, A PLAN AND A COMMITMENT TO CULTIVATE IT AS LONG AS NECESSARY. I like what Tom Landry, the coach of the Dallas Cowboys once said. It went something like this: "I have a job to do that is not very complicated, but it is difficult: to get a group of men to do what they don't want to do so they can achieve the one thing they have wanted all of their lives." Isn't that a great statement? Cultivating a garden requires those daily little tasks that are a pain, perhaps. But you do them because in your mind's eye you can see the beauty and the bounty that awaits you. That, of course, is what disciplined living is all about.

Some people do not understand the nature of discipline. They think of it as mindless slavery to meaningless activity. I chuckled when I heard about the Marine Sergeant who was trying to enforce the old rules of Marine discipline with a modern psychological idea that you should always explain why. He was heard yelling at a squadron of green recruits: "Take a look at yourselves! Shoes not shined properly, haircuts terrible, ties crooked, and whiskers like you haven't shaved in a week. SUPPOSE SOME COUNTRY SUDDENLY DECLARED WAR ON US! WHAT WOULD WE DO?" No, disciplined living is not following a mindless routine. It is the application of the plan to the man or the woman who has caught a vision of life's boundless possibilities.

Isn't it time you got rid of the weeds in your life? Weeds are the enemy of a beautiful garden whether that garden is a good marriage, or the sanctity of your body, or your relationship with your children, or your progress in your profession, or your relationship with God. Weeds require no effort, but they can choke out the work of a lifetime. A beautiful garden, on the other hand, requires vision, planning and discipline. But the prize is worth the price!

So heed Jesus' warnings about weeds. A farmer was out spraying in his garden. A certain beetle was threatening his crops. His little girl was upset with her father killing all those helpless little bugs. Her father patiently explained that their family was dependent on their garden and the beetles could literally cause them to starve. "You see," said her father, "I'm not so much opposed to beetles. It's just that I am for our garden." That is God's attitude toward weeds. Successful living requires us to get rid of the weeds as well.

Collected Sermons, King Duncan, 0-000-0000-20

 HOMILETICSONLINE

| Willy Wonka’s WeedsMatthew 13:24-30, 36-43   |   7/17/2005Willy Wonka is returning to the cinema this summer with his staff of Oompa-Loompas. Like us, he has to deal with people — kids — both naughty and nice.Charlie Bucket and Veruca Salt.

A good seed, and a bad weed.

Charlie’s honest, kind, brave and true.

Veruca is a spoiled-rotten brat.

Both get a chance to enter the mysterious chocolate factory of Willy Wonka, a place that has been sealed up tight and closed to the public for a decade. Charlie and Veruca have found Golden Tickets in their Wonka chocolate bars — Charlie’s ticket was in a Whipple-Scrumptious Fudgemallow Delight, to be exact — and because of this they get to go on a tour of the chocolate factory, along with three other lucky children.

Their tour guide is none other than the reclusive and eccentric Willy Wonka himself, a part played by Johnny Depp in the movie Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, which opened last week. When the children walk through the factory doors, they enter an amazing world known only to Willy and his staff of Oompa-Loompas.

The tour is a dream come true for Charlie, a child born into poverty, but it turns into a nightmare for the other members of the group. Willy Wonka is beset with problems: There’s Augustus Gloop, whose hobby is eating; Violet Beauregarde, a dim-witted gum chewer; and Mike Teavee, a gangster-wannabe who is obsessed with television.

As for Veruca Salt, let’s just say that Willy is not amused when she demands of her father, “Daddy, I want a boat like this! ... And I want lots of Oompa-Loompas to row me about, and I want a chocolate river and I want ... I want ...”

Now it wouldn’t be right to give away the secrets of the chocolate factory, but suffice it to say that a number of the children get in trouble when they disobey Willy’s orders. One by one, the nasty are punished and the good are rewarded, in some spectacular and disturbing ways.

That’s what we love about this flick: The good kids get rewarded, and the bad kids get what’s coming to them. It’s a replay of primal, dualistic, Manichaen good vs. evil, light vs. dark, and in the end goodness and light triumph.

And we love this because in real life, it doesn’t always work this way. The psalmist paints a far more accurate picture when he complains about the wicked prospering while the righteous suffer. For the Old Testament prophet, Habakkuk, it was a faith-threatening reality: “The wicked hem in the righteous, so that justice is perverted” (Habakkuk 1:4 NIV).

So we love it when the wicked are punished, when the unrighteous are mowed down, when the weeds are uprooted in the garden.

This is the subject of the text. Here Jesus seems to be acting an awful lot like Willy Wonka. He tells the parable of the weeds and the wheat, and concludes his story with the command to “collect the weeds and tie them in bundles to be burned; then gather the wheat and bring it into my barn” (Matthew 13:30 NIV).

But there is more to this parable than its crisp and clear conclusion about judgment day, when the evildoers of this world will burn and the righteous will “shine like the sun” (13:43). While we certainly have to take seriously this prediction of God’s final judgment, we also need to listen to what Jesus says about the danger of making judgments of our own along the way.

Here’s the preaching point: Leave the weeds to me, says Jesus. You just worry about growing up as wheat.

This is counter intuitive but important advice because we live in a gnashing-of-teeth culture of shouting and name-calling. One person’s weed is another person’s flower.

And it’s not just in the world. The church has caught this infection as well. Christians, right and left, are strutting around these days in the garments of self-righteousness suggesting that those who disagree with them are the weeds in the garden of life, while they themselves are the beauty and flower of the garden.

It’s a rush-to-judgment world we live in. Some are judged harshly for being too radical, others for not being radical enough. Some are judged for embracing doctrinal errors, others for appearing not to have any doctrine at all. Some are condemned for not caring for the poor, others for caring only for the poor. And so it goes.

No wonder, then, that Jesus counsels us to hold off on the weed-pulling “for in gathering the weeds you would uproot the wheat along with them” (13:29).

The parable goes like this: a householder sows good seed in his field, and then an enemy comes and sows weeds among the wheat. It’s a nasty little case of agricultural terrorism.

When the plants come up and bear grain, the weeds appear as well. And the slaves of the householder come to him and say, “Master, we’ve got a problem. Weeds among the wheat. Do you want us to go out and pull up the weeds?”

This seems like a logical response, but the householder gives them a very different command. “No,” he says; “for in gathering the weeds you would uproot the wheat along with them. Let both of them grow together until the harvest” (13:29-30). The master senses that a full-scale attack on the weeds would disturb and possibly even destroy the good wheat, so he instructs his slaves to do nothing about the bad seeds now. At harvest time the householder plans to tell the reapers, “Collect the weeds first and bind them in bundles to be burned, but gather the wheat into my barn” (13:30).

Jesus takes a totally non-Wonkish approach to rooting out evil. Whereas Willy doesn’t bat an eye as Augustus plunges into a chocolate river, Violet turns into a blueberry, Mike disappears into a transporter beam, and Veruca slides down a garbage chute into a furnace, Jesus is committed to preserving the weeds until the wheat is fully developed. He doesn’t have any desire to rush to judgment, preferring instead for nature to take its course.

The point of this parable is not that Jesus is going to go easy on the weeds. No, he fully intends to put evildoers into the furnace of fire, “where there will be weeping and gnashing of teeth” (13:42).

What Jesus is trying to teach us is to leave the judgments to him. He knows that we are consistently off the mark when we try to make an accurate assessment of the moral character of a friend or a neighbor, and so he orders us to put our energy elsewhere.

Here’s an example: A seminar leader recently showed a class of government workers a series of pictures. The pictures began with a view of a person’s face, and then broadened the view to reveal the person’s entire body. It was only when the entire picture was seen that the class could make anything approaching an accurate judgment.

The first picture showed the face of a grizzled man, scowling and straining. He looked to be a member of a motorcycle gang, perhaps gripping the handlebar of a chopper. But when the entire picture was revealed, it became clear that he was a maker of customized wheelchairs for the handicapped, and he was pushing one of his creations.

Picture two showed the face of a lovely woman with a beautiful smile. She appeared to be a flight attendant or a hostess at an upscale restaurant. But when the view was expanded, what the class saw was an exotic dancer, ready to do a pole dance.

We don’t have the whole picture, says Jesus.

The challenge for us is to put our energy into being good wheat, instead of trashing the weeds around us. Rather than erecting walls, building boundaries and trying to purify our community of faith, our job is to grow up healthy and strong — and leave the judging to Jesus. The problem with trying to pull up weeds is that we might grab some wheat by mistake, and hurt ourselves and others who are part of the good-seed set.

Forty years ago some Christians condemned Martin Luther King as a rabble-rouser and a troublemaker. Some Christians denounced Dorothy Day because she did some writing for a socialist newspaper, and missed her great Christian work on behalf of the poor. Some call U2 singer, Bono, an airheaded, irreverent rock star — and he may be — but fail to heed his call to respond to the AIDS emergency in Africa.

Don’t rush to judgment, says Jesus. Let the weeds grow up with the wheat. It will get sorted out in the end.

The best news is that growth and maturity are probably the most effective forms of weed control. If you are responsible for taking care of a lawn, you know that healthy grass is extremely competitive and will crowd out most weeds all by itself. If your lawn is healthy, you shouldn’t have to dig out many weeds at all — in fact, the presence of weeds is a sign that your grass is weaker than it should be. If you find yourself dealing with weeds, one of the best things to do is simply let your grass grow. Don’t cut it so short.

In the end, it’s enough to know that we are “seeds” who have been planted by the “Son of Man,” and that we’re part of a healthy harvest that will someday be reaped by the angels of God.

We don’t want a Willy Wonka in the church.

It would be enough to be like Charlie Bucket, a kid who was kind, brave and true.


Participation Pointers:

• Consult the 1971 movie Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory with Gene Wilder as Willy Wonka for possible film clips.

• Go to textweek.com for Ian Pollock’s painting “The Weeds.” Notice that the weeds are depicted in garish and grotesque forms, easily identified as evil or malevolent. It might have been more interesting for the painting to have emphasized flowing, beautiful and pleasing forms to emphasize the message that weeds can take many different forms. http://www.textweek.com/art/parables.htm. ----

Commentary In critical scholarship on the parables of Jesus, a distinction has often been drawn between the genre and function of a parable and an allegory. This distinction can help us recognize the various options for interpretation of today’s text. The genre of “allegory” is easier to define than that of “parable,” so we can begin with it. The genre of allegory comprises a set of multiple symbols in the world of a narrative, each of which can be interpreted to correspond to another set of referents, which are outside the world of the narrative. An allegory is usually interpreted to have multiple points of correspondence and to guide the listener through the world of the narrative into another world of the referents. In many cases this other world of referents is the real world, comprising historical, present, or future people and events.

Allegorical interpretation thus involves the unlocking of a story’s symbols through the use of a set of hermeneutical keys. Without the proper keys, an interpreter remains on the superficial level of the story world. But with the proper keys, an interpreter can enter and guide others into the world of referents, unlocking the esoteric (and purportedly more important) meanings of the story. Literary critics further elaborate the genre by distinguishing between compositional allegory (texts composed with the intention of being allegories) and allegorical interpretation (reading a text as an allegory regardless of the author’s intention).

The genre of “parable” has been more difficult to define, because this term usually encompasses a range of teachings of Jesus that have diverse genres and functions. There are singular comparisons or similitudes, like that of the “mustard seed,” which are only slightly extended metaphors. Then there are fictional example stories, like that of the “good Samaritan,” which are not based on an opaque metaphor but rather endorse a certain type of behavior. The writers of the synoptic gospels are not all that helpful in our effort to define the genre, since simple proverbs (Matthew 15:15) and detailed ethical instructions (e.g., Luke 14:7) are also given the title “parable.” For the purposes of today’s text, we can focus on Matthew’s use of parables and his choice of an allegorical interpretation.

The parable of the weeds among the wheat (vv. 24-30) is one of the parables supplied with an allegorical interpretation (vv. 36-43) in Matthew’s gospel. In verses 37-39, he delineates eight correspondences between the story world and the real world. The agricultural story world is interpreted in terms of the real world of apocalyptic eschatology. Almost every available noun in the parable is allegorized, and the listener is left with few options for interpretation. He goes on to provide a “mini-apocalypse” in verses 40-43, which leaves even less openness for continued interpretation: every potential mystery of this parable is interpreted and explained. The case seems closed.

But historical and literary scholars, especially those associated with the method of “form criticism,” do not think the case is closed so easily. Form criticism, affiliated most prominently with Rudolf Bultmann and famously executed on the parables by Joachim Jeremias, presupposes that behind the texts of the canonical gospels lies at least one generation of oral tradition. Form critics attempt to demarcate the strata of oral tradition behind the received text in order to isolate older versions of texts, versions closer to the words of the historical Jesus. Now regardless of what one thinks of the historical Jesus project in general, many agree that this process can reinvigorate one’s interpretation of the parables. For today’s text, one could try to assume that the allegorical interpretation does not exist — how might the parable function on its own?

Form criticism does have a payoff here for preaching: It enables the preacher to refresh the parables of Jesus and in some small way recreate the feeling of hearing them for the first time, perhaps even the feeling of hearing them in their original context. Freed from the allegorical interpretation, how could one imagine the parable’s function? A good place to begin is with the climax of the short narrative: the dialogue between the slaves and the householder. The householder rejects the slaves’ expectations when he replies that they should not go and gather the weeds (v. 29). Historians disagree about how the original agrarian audience might have understood this reply. Some have argued that the response is banal and accurate — that the annoying weed was similar in appearance to wheat and could only have been identified when both were ripe. Others have argued that the response is surprising and foolish — that the weeds have differently shaped leaves even when young, and that their fungus would be intertwined with the wheat if a farmer waited too long.

How one decides on this matter would influence the interpretation, but there is at least one point that is unaffected. The householder encourages a level of patience from his workers that they did not expect. Furthermore, he might be implying a level of distrust in the ability of his slaves to properly separate the weeds from the wheat. One way this parable could be applied to a Christian community is by focusing on the patience and humility demanded of the slaves. In the same way that the slaves might not have been able to properly discern weeds from wheat, so Christians might not be able to discern the fruitful from the poisonous in their own communities. They must be patient — even illogically so — while waiting for harvest time.

Another possible point of departure could be the householder’s defense of his opinion: “for in gathering the weeds you would uproot the wheat along with them” (v. 29). The overarching concern of the householder is for the health of the wheat, not the destruction of the weeds. The concern of the farmer is positively for the crop, not negatively against the disease. In a Christian setting, leaders must always be vigilant lest they focus too much on the poisonous elements of their community. It might seem intuitive that the best decision for the collective is to censure and possibly expel those who are harming the community. But uprooting is a violent act whose collateral damage cannot be controlled.

If one wants to preach on the entire text, including the allegorical interpretation, the theme of judgment seems unavoidable. Presented as an esoteric interpretation to Jesus’ chosen “insiders,” we might first think that the parable reassures them in their role as the “righteous” who “will shine like the sun in the kingdom of their Father” (v. 43). However, we should notice that Jesus does not necessarily equate his disciples with the “children of the kingdom.” The disciples may know the secrets, but they are not necessarily safe. There is no one for whom the warning of judgment has lost its relevance. Here is a key moment for a pastor’s discernment of what a congregation needs at a given time: a reminder of humble patience, or a warning of judgment?----

Animating Illustrations A weed is a plant that has mastered every survival skill except for learning how to grow in rows.

—Doug Larson.----

Noted biblical scholar F.B. Meyer was never in a hurry to jump to conclusions about the alleged improprieties of others. He argued that, first, we do not know how hard he or she tried not to sin. And second, we do not know the power of the forces that assailed him or her. We also do not know what we would have done in the same circumstances. ----

Harry Ironside, for 18 years pastor of Moody Memorial Church in Chicago, understood the folly of trying to separate the wheat from the tares.

He was fond of telling the story of Bishop Potter. He was sailing for Europe on one of the great transatlantic ocean liners back before taking cruises was popular.

When he went on board, he found that another passenger was to share the cabin with him. After going to see the accommodations, he came up to the purser’s desk and inquired if he could leave his gold watch and other valuables in the ship’s safe. He explained that ordinarily he never availed himself of that privilege, but he had been to his cabin and had met the man who was to occupy the other berth. Judging from his appearance, he was afraid that he might not be a very trustworthy person.

The purser accepted the responsibility for the valuables and remarked, “It’s all right, bishop, I’ll be very glad to take care of them for you. The other man has been up here and left his for the same reason!”----

I think of a hard young man who’d come to faith in Christ out of one of the gangs that roam the streets of Belfast, Northern Ireland. The boy had started to show up faithfully at Sunday services and, at one of them, brought along with him some of his gang-member friends. The latter young men were a lot weedier than their sponsor and so began to act out during the worship service.

Finally, when this had gone on for too long, the first young man turned upon his compatriots and said in a voice that all could hear, “Would you shut your #$^%&@ mouths; Jesus is @#$%$%# great!”

The incident provoked the call for an elders’ meeting immediately after church. As they gathered, one of the elders fumed, “We’ve got to do something about that Ryan boy.”

Most of the others murmured their agreement and the oldest and most respected of the Elders spoke up. “I concur,” he said.

“Let’s throw him out,” one of the others injected.

“Actually,” said the wizened saint, “I was about to suggest that we mark that young man for future leadership. There’s a fiber and faith there that I think has promise.”

—Daniel D. Meyer, “Of weeds and wheat: How do you spot a saint?” November 3, 2002, Christ Church Web Site, cc-ob.org. ----

Several parallels between the film [Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory] and the tenets of Judeo-Christian belief stand out to the viewer. First, the concept of God is almost fully embodied in Willy Wonka himself. Wonka is omnipotent, omnipresent and secluded. He controls the one thing that the whole world wants: candy. In a song in the beginning of the film that refers to Wonka, a shopkeeper sings,

“The candy man can ’cause he mixes it with love
And makes the world taste good
And the world tastes good
’Cause the candy man thinks it should.”

This last line implies that Wonka has the power to dictate the general happiness of the world. The song also introduces the very important concept of love. This is interesting because in the Judeo-Christian religion, God is love.

The concept of sin is well imbedded in the minds of those who are familiar with the doctrine of Judeo-Christian religion. However, while the “sins” of the characters in the film are really just varying forms of excess and not traditional sins, they have the same result. Augustus’ gluttony, Violet’s gum chewing, Veruca’s selfishness and Mike’s insatiable craving for television all bring about their respective doom in such a way that makes each one a victim of his or her own sin. This is quite fitting since according to the Christian religion “the wages of sin is death.”

—Jeremy Connor, Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory, November 1998, Roald Dahl Fans Web Site, roaldahlfans.com.----

There were several scenes cut from the movie, one of which depicted a mountain climber who encounters a guru at the top of a peak. He asks the typical question, “What is the meaning of life?”

“You got Wonka bar?” the guru says by way of reply.

The climber hands him a Wonka bar, the guru unwraps it and finds nothing.

“Life,” opines the guru solemnly, “is a disappointment.”

At an early screening of the movie, nobody laughed, and the scene was removed. A psychologist queried about the unexpected response said, “Nobody laughed, because for many people, life is a disappointment.”----

The poet Samuel Coleridge had a conversation with a man who believed that children should receive no formal religious instruction. Instead, they should be free to choose their own religion when they reached adulthood.

Coleridge did not openly disagree, but he later invited the man into his rather unkempt garden. “You call this a garden?” the visitor exclaimed. “There are nothing but weeds here!”

“Well, you see,” Coleridge replied, “I did not wish to infringe upon the liberty of the garden in any way. I was just giving the garden a chance to express itself and to choose its own production.”----

It’s a frustrating story, weeds and wheat together. But it’s also real. You raise your children, and you pray for them. Your take them to worship — you surround them with good friends, good influences. And then they go to school, and they come home with words that you hoped they’d never hear. And they watch television and they experience a world of extramarital affairs and uncommitted relationships and rape and drugs and alcohol. And it’s like wheat being surrounded by weeds.

It’s real, and what we would pray to God is this: “Take the weeds away!” Take away the evil and the temptations and the anxieties. Pull those weeds. Take away the wars and the human hunger. Take away the divisions between humanity. Yes, our prayer would be no less than Jesus’ prayer, “Father, if it be your will, take this cup from me ....”

But the kingdom of God is here on earth and wheat and weeds grow side by side, lest in pulling out the weeds we disrupt the wheat as well. Weeds and wheat — side by side. We are not afforded a monastery — where we could get away from the problems of this world. And our church does not give us the option of saying, “This one stays, but this one goes.” “Judgment is mine, sayeth the Lord.” So where does this leave us? Wheat, weeds, together.

—Kim Henning, “Those weeds! Oh, those weeds,” July 21, 2002, Grace Congregational Church Web Site, graceucc.org.----

When Dr. Harold Bosley was pastor of Christ Church in New York City, he preached a sermon entitled, “Shall We Be Patient with Evil?” He pointed out how during the Civil War everything was crystal clear on both sides, if you could judge by what was being said. He then told of an experience he had while visiting a museum in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, where there is a huge painting of Pickett’s charge at Gettysburg. In front of him was a mother with two small sons who were asking questions. The mother replied softly, “It is hard to tell.” The child asked why they were trying to kill each other. The mother patiently tried to explain about slavery and the other issues. “Did they have to fight?” the lad asked. Her answer was classic. “They thought so,” she said. Dr. Bosley pointed out: “There was in that reply the gentleness distilled in the interval of a hundred years.” Socrates once observed: “He who takes only a few things into account finds it easy to pronounce judgment.” Be patient! Wait until harvest time.

—Thomas Lane Butts, “Problems beyond our power to fix,” March 9, 1997, Day 1 Web Site, day1.net.----


Children's Sermon Pull up some weeds from your lawn or garden and bring them in a brown paper bag to show the kids. Dandelions would be good. Ask the kids what’s so bad about weeds. Why do we hate weeds? The dandelion has a nice, pretty yellow flower, after all. Play off their answers. They might include: Weeds grow everywhere, they grow where they are not wanted, they grow fast, they can’t be controlled, and most of the time they’re not pretty. Kids may not be able to understand their actions as weedlike or flowerlike, but you could give it a try. Emphasize that God sees us as flowers, not weeds. God wants us to bring beauty and happiness into the world. If you want to, you could also talk about the people who take care of flowers, that is, provide water and fertilizer, and so on. These would be our parents and teachers and friends — everyone who wants to help us be beautiful flowers.----

Worship Resources
Calls to Worship General

Leader 1: Let the biblical story be the story of our worship today ...

Leader 2: Jacob paused on his journey to Haran, and rested.

People: Let us also pause along our journey. May this worship be a time of re-creation for weary souls.

Leader 1: Jacob dreamed of a ladder connecting heaven and earth; angels ascended and descended.

People: May the space between heaven and earth be thin and transparent; let us enter God’s presence in prayer, proclamation and song.

Leader 2: God said to Jacob: “I am the God of your ancestors. I will provide for you.”

People: Let us worship the God who governs all time, who holds past, present and future in providential care.

Leader 1: Jacob awoke from his dream, and in gladness he cried:

Leader 2: “Surely God is in this place, and I did not know it!”

People: Surely God is in this place!

Leader 1: Surely, God IS!

People: Let us rejoice in this assurance! Let us worship God!

—Based on Genesis 28.

Benedictions General

Leader 1: Let the biblical story be the story of our service in the world ...

Leader 2: God said to Jacob: “Your offspring will spread to the four corners of the earth.”

People: May the good news of God spread throughout the world; let us carry the gospel to the north, south, east and west.

Leader 1: God said, “All the families of the earth shall be blessed through your offspring.”

People: May all that we say and all that we do be a blessing, through the grace of God.

Leader 2: And God said, “I will not leave you until I have done what I have promised.”

People: Let us venture forth in joy and confidence, knowing that God is with us; God is before us; God is among us; God is behind us; God is beyond us; God is within us. Amen!

— Based on Genesis 28.

Music Links

Hymns

O God of Bethel, By Whose Hand

God of Our Life

O for a Closer Walk with God


Praise

I Was Made to Praise You

We Are an Offering

Let Your Spirit Rise within Me

Lectionary Texts

Ninth Sunday After Pentecost, Cycle A

Genesis 28:10-19a

Psalm 139:1-12, 23-24*

Romans 8:12-25*

Matthew 13:24-30, 36-43*


*Sermonic treatments of these texts are available online. |

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