The Sower (1)
W K Tweedie
A traveller in the Holy Land was riding slowly along the western edge of the
Sea of Galilee. He was approaching the Plain of Gennesaret and, as he rode,
he meditated on the parables of Jesus. The rocky shore at that point did not
suggest anything that could be supposed to give rise to a parable like that
of the sower, which was known to have been spoken from a fishing boat in the
lake to a crowd assembled on the beach. But scarcely had the traveller turned
his thoughts to that parable when a slight change of view opened up at once
what he describes as "every feature of the great parable".
There was a cornfield before him descending to the water's edge. There was
a beaten footpath leading through the midst of it, where no fence prevented
grain from falling on either side as it was sown. The path was made hard by
the constant tramp of horse and mule and wayfaring men. Moreover, there was
rich soil there in abundance, producing a waving mass of corn. There was rocky
ground also visible amid the grain, as well as on distant grassy slopes, and
there were large bushes of thorn springing up in the very midst of the waving
wheat. Then countless flocks of birds of all kinds were hovering in the region,
such as no doubt devoured the seed which fell by the wayside.
Here, then, we see the scenery of the parable beautifully presented to the
eye. The Holy Land has changed few of its habits since the Saviour was in our
world. (2) The same pathways are trodden and
the same practices continued. In some respects it is as if eighteen centuries
were scarcely more than as many years.
But what does the parable mean? Jesus himself explained it. The sower is the
Saviour - or it may be anyone who is employed to proclaim God's message of
mercy to man. The Word of God is compared to seed. It is called the good seed.
It is a thing that grows. It bears fruit, and that fruit is one great design
of all that Jesus taught. He said, "Herein is My Father glorified, that ye
bear much fruit".
But when Jesus sowed - when he preached and wished men to be holy - some seeds
fell by the wayside. It could not be covered there, for there was no earth
to cover it; and the birds which hovered around soon devoured it all. Now that
represents the man who hears the Word of God but does not understand it. The
heart is beaten hard by this world and sin. There is no place for the seed
to take root there - no, not an inch. As well expect grain and a harvest on
the highway as the fruits of righteousness in a soul all covered over with
the hard and stony influence of sin. To expect a crop to grow on a path that
is thus beaten would only prove our foolishness, and it is just as vain to
expect any good from a heart which the world has trodden till even the truth
of God produces no effect. Satan, the wicked one, snatches it utterly away
- and man then becomes a wicked one himself.
Next, some of the sower's seed fell upon stony places - that is, where the
soil was very thin, for the rocks were near the surface and sometimes rose
above it. Here the seed quickly sprang up. If there were heat and a little
moisture, it would spring up almost in a night - so conducive to growth is
the sunshine at some seasons in the Holy Land. But though the seed sprang up,
it did not continue springing. Nay, it soon withered away. The brilliant sun
at noon parched it and it died.
Now Jesus explains that to mean the hearers of His word who seem to welcome
it with great joy for a while. They are delighted with it. They make much talk
and loud profession regarding it, but that soon passes away. The seed was never
in the heart. It had not reached the conscience or the understanding and, after
all their promising appearance, such souls are dead and withered still. They
bear no fruit unto holiness. When trial or persecution comes, they turn away
from the Saviour; and who would not ask, Lord, is it I? Lord, is it I? "He
that is of God, heareth God's word." Do I?
Further, some of the sower's seed fell among thorns. In the parable it means
the kind of thorn of which Christ's crown, when He was crucified, was made.
These thorns choked the seed. It could not grow there; it was dwarfed and died.
And so when the truth of God is sown in any heart, the cares of the world soon
banish it again. The truth is overshadowed, overlaid and destroyed. Who ever
saw a man who was busy grasping at this world's goods, and making money his
god, really prospering in his soul? Nay, he is pierced through with many sorrows,
and every one of them is unto death.
But some of the seed from the sower's basket and hand fell upon good ground;
it sprang up there; the moisture nourished it; the sun ripened it. First, there
was the blade, then there was the stalk, then the ear, then the ripe grain,
and, last of all, the harvest. Now Jesus explains that to mean the men who
welcome God's word, who lay it up in their heart, who love it, who try to obey
it, and who pray for the Holy Spirit to sanctify them through God's truth,
for His word is truth. That is the teaching of Jesus, and the soul is happy
which produces even only thirtyfold in this manner; that soul is happier still
which produces sixtyfold; and that soul is happiest of all which produces a
hundredfold. If we begin in early youth - that is, in the seed-time of life
- to prepare for this, then, before we are old, if we live till then, we may
hope that God's good and Holy Spirit will enable us to produce the hundredfold.
To such the hoary head is like a crown of glory. But how poor and piteous is
that heart which produces only thorns and briars!
Endnotes:
1. Taken, slightly edited, from Tweedie's book, Parables
of Our Lord. This article is based on Matthew 13:1-23.
2. Note that the book was published in 1865.
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