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Pretty soon your garden is full of weeds. So they asked the master, “You are a good farmer. You sow good seeds. Why are there weeds in the field?” And he responds, “an enemy has done this.” Another surprise there, he wouldn’t say “well you know sometimes weeds just grow.” He knows that this is the direct result of someone's plot against him.
And so the servants say to him, “well do you want us to go and gather them?” And here you have a bit of a twist because you might be expecting the master to say “well yeah, get the weeds out of the field,” because again, think about normal gardening practices. If you have weeds in your garden, your first impulse is going to be to go and take them out so that whatever plants are planted there will continue to grow and bear fruit. But the master doesn't do that, he says here, “let them grow together because if you go and gather the weeds you might root up the wheat along with them. Let them stay together until the harvest and then at the harvest time I'm going to have the harvesters separate them out. Gather the weeds and burn them and gather the wheat into the barn.” Okay, so what is all this about? Well obviously this is not just about first century agricultural practices. Jesus is trying to lead the disciples into one of the mysteries of the kingdom.
And one of the mysteries of the kingdom of God is that when you look at it, it's a mixed bag. It looks like a field that has been neglected because is not only has weed in it, it also has weeds in it. In other words, it’s not pretty. You might expect, like one of the prophets say in the Old Testament, “the kingdom of God is like a glorious field of wheat, a golden field of wheat.” But that is not what the kingdom looks like in the parable. In this parable the kingdom looks like a field that is a mixed bag. It has weeds and it has wheat, and Jesus’ point here, the meaning, the message of this particular passage, is that that shouldn't be a scandal to the disciples. In other words, there is going to be good and there is going to be evil. There's going to be wheat and there's going to be tares in the kingdom until the very end. That God, in his mysterious providence, allows the good and evil to stand, to grow, so to speak, side-by-side. But that doesn't mean he's negligent, it doesn't mean he is unaware of the evil, it doesn't mean that he is not going to do something about it. All of it will be sorted out, but only at the end, only at the final judgment. Now as soon as I am saying that I am realizing that I just gave you the explanation. We are supposed to wait because Jesus is going to give you the explanation a little bit later. But I hope that gives you a sense of what Jesus is doing here and how the parable might be somewhat unexpected.
Pretty soon your garden is full of weeds. So they asked the master, “You are a good farmer. You sow good seeds. Why are there weeds in the field?” And he responds, “an enemy has done this.” Another surprise there, he wouldn’t say “well you know sometimes weeds just grow.” He knows that this is the direct result of someone's plot against him.
And so the servants say to him, “well do you want us to go and gather them?” And here you have a bit of a twist because you might be expecting the master to say “well yeah, get the weeds out of the field,” because again, think about normal gardening practices. If you have weeds in your garden, your first impulse is going to be to go and take them out so that whatever plants are planted there will continue to grow and bear fruit. But the master doesn't do that, he says here, “let them grow together because if you go and gather the weeds you might root up the wheat along with them. Let them stay together until the harvest and then at the harvest time I'm going to have the harvesters separate them out. Gather the weeds and burn them and gather the wheat into the barn.” Okay, so what is all this about? Well obviously this is not just about first century agricultural practices. Jesus is trying to lead the disciples into one of the mysteries of the kingdom.
And one of the mysteries of the kingdom of God is that when you look at it, it's a mixed bag. It looks like a field that has been neglected because is not only has weed in it, it also has weeds in it. In other words, it’s not pretty. You might expect, like one of the prophets say in the Old Testament, “the kingdom of God is like a glorious field of wheat, a golden field of wheat.” But that is not what the kingdom looks like in the parable. In this parable the kingdom looks like a field that is a mixed bag. It has weeds and it has wheat, and Jesus’ point here, the meaning, the message of this particular passage, is that that shouldn't be a scandal to the disciples. In other words, there is going to be good and there is going to be evil. There's going to be wheat and there's going to be tares in the kingdom until the very end. That God, in his mysterious providence, allows the good and evil to stand, to grow, so to speak, side-by-side. But that doesn't mean he's negligent, it doesn't mean he is unaware of the evil, it doesn't mean that he is not going to do something about it. All of it will be sorted out, but only at the end, only at the final judgment. Now as soon as I am saying that I am realizing that I just gave you the explanation. We are supposed to wait because Jesus is going to give you the explanation a little bit later. But I hope that gives you a sense of what Jesus is doing here and how the parable might be somewhat unexpected.