Text: Mark
4: 30 And he said, "With what can we
compare the kingdom of God, or what parable shall we use for it? 31 It is like a grain of mustard
seed, which, when sown on the ground, is the smallest of all the seeds on
earth, 32 yet when it is
sown it grows up and becomes larger than all the garden plants and puts out
large branches, so that the birds of the air can make nests in its
shade."
INTRODUCTION: My
dear friends in Christ, it was the week before Father's Day and some children
were looking for a gift for their dad. As they strolled through the men's
section of a department store their eyes spotted the perfect gift at the same
moment. It was a bright, splashy Hawaiian style shirt with matching shorts.
They giggled as they purchased it because their father is a pretty
conservative dresser. As they were handing the money to the woman at the cash
register, One daughter asked another of the daughters, "But, do you think he will actually wear it?"
She shrugged her shoulders and said, "It's anybody's guess."
That
phrase, "It's
anybody's guess," keeps coming up. We don't have to read far
in the newspaper these days before we see it. Despite the advanced science of
weather forecasting, the final path of a hurricane is “anybody's guess.” The
direction of the housing market in our area is “anybody's guess”. Next year's
property taxes are “anybody's guess.” The results of next fall’s elections
are anybody’s guess. Some things
really are “anybody's guess,” like whether a certain book will sell
well or a new Broadway play will make it to a second season.
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I.
But, there are some other things in the
moral and spiritual realm that are not a guess at all. The kingdom of God is
one.
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A. Jesus' disciples were feeling
discouraged.
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1. Sure, crowds were gathering to hear
their teacher, but there was little evidence of progress and a lot of
evidence of resistance.
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a. The upper classes were rejecting
Jesus and the capitol city acted as though he didn't exist.
b. The Roman conquerors paid no
attention at all.
c. If someone had asked the
disciples what they thought about the future of the kingdom Jesus was
speaking about, they may well have responded, "It's anybody's guess."
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2. Jesus
has been talking about the Kingdom of God, the time when God's reign will be
manifest upon the earth.
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a.
It was apparent that it wasn't happening then--At least not in the way they
all expected.
b.
It would be even more difficult at the conclusion of Jesus' ministry for his
disciples to believe that the Kingdom of God had come any closer to being a
reality. They would be a small, discouraged group of fugitives without a
leader.
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B.
Part of the reason
they got discouraged and we get discouraged is that we are victims of
bigness.
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1.Cities vie with each other to
claim the greatest growth and the fanciest entertainments. Corporations are
proud when their company occupies the tallest building in the city. Every day
we read in our newspapers about famous people doing famous things. We have
megamalls, megachurches, and megastorms.
2.
Another reason we get discouraged is we want to be swept off our feet. Over twenty years ago little DeAndra Anrig
of Mountain View, California was literally swept off her feet.
According to
the Associated Press DeAndra and her parents, were picnicking with friends at
a park about 30 miles south of San Francisco and about two miles from the
Palo Alto Airport. They were taking turns flying a glider type kite with a 12
foot wingspan. While it was DeAndra's turn, a plane descending for the airport
snagged line to Andrea's kite. DeAndra’s mother said "She said it was just a big jerk that
lifted her into the air. It carried her right over my husband's head. I'm
just thankful she let go."
She
let go after travelling about 100 feet and fell about 10 feet to the ground,
leaving her with several bruises. Obviously that was a scary experience for
little DeAndra. But there is something exciting about it, too. Who among us
would not like to be lifted off of the ground to big experiences and new
excitement by God Himself.
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II. Jesus
had determined that Now was the time to provide the disciples with a message
that would give them hope in times of discouragement and sustain them in the
face of future persecution. But His words have a message, not only for his
original disciples, but for us as well.
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A. Obviously
Jesus doesn't agree that it is anybody’s
guess whether the Kingdom of God is coming.
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1. He says
firmly that the kingdom of God has already begun. Then to dispel the
disciples' doubts and doldrums, he tells them a story.
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a. There was a farmer who reached
into a seed bag and tried to pull out one Super Grade A Golden Mustard Seed.
It was quite a trick to get just one because they were so tiny. You need your
bifocals to see one seed. A small handful looks like a little finely ground
pepper. It's amazing that such a tiny seed grows into such a large bush. A
fat sparrow, who has to pick hundreds of the tiny seeds just for its
breakfast, can sit comfortably on its sturdy branches. Best of all, when the
farmer has put the seeds into the ground, he can go home and take a long nap
because the seed will
grow whether he worries or not. That's how the kingdom of God works.
b. In the Midwest, they plant more
corn than mustard seed. One variety of corn is called Golden Bantam. Apparently,
all the Golden Bantam corn in this country came from one stalk discovered on
a Vermont hillside. How it got there is “anybody's guess.” But appreciating
its special qualities, the person who discovered it carefully preserved its
seed and planted it year after year. Now it is available to the whole world.
That's how the kingdom of God works.
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2. There are some things that are certain.
Jesus says the kingdom of God is one of them. It’s not anybody’s guess. With very small things, God can do some
very big things. And that’s just opposite of how we normally think.
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a. A small baby born in a manger in a small
town is the center of all God wanted to do for us. This baby grew up in a small town in
Galilee. He was from a small backwater
corner of the Roman Empire. They He walked everywhere he went, except into
Jerusalem that last time. He was
executed – a small notation in Roman historical records. From a world history stand point it would
have been barely noticed. But on that
cross God did big things. He won
salvation for the world through the blood of His Son. Jesus had a small funeral – a few men and
women took him from the cross and carried him to a tomb. And even the resurrection as momentous as
it was, is small from the perspective of the world stage.
b. God is still bringing in the
kingdom through small things. Jesus
spoke of the importance of small things: a mustard seed, a cup of cold water,
a widow's mite, a kindness done to the least of these.
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B.
Jesus knows what we too often forget: God
works big things through small things.
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1. When it comes to the seed of the
kingdom of God, Jesus speaks of the Word – the good news of what He has
done. And He speaks with an unshakable
confidence, as though he held the future - and the seed, and you - in the palm
of his hand
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a.
In an effort to stimulate their thoughts about the nature of God, one pastor
invited a group of teenagers to join him in watching the movie, Oh, God!
In the
course of the movie, God, in the person of George Burns, has prevailed on
Jerry, the assistant manager of a supermarket, played by John Denver, to
carry God's message to the world. Toward the end of the film, Jerry is
lamenting to God that nobody seems to be listening to the message. He tells
God that he thinks that they have failed. But God doesn't see it that way.
"Oh, I don't think so," God says. "You never know; a seed here, a seed there,
something will catch hold and grow."
Jesus
called the mustard seed the tiniest seed on earth, but when it grows up, it
is taller than any of the other plants in the garden with branches so large
that the birds of the air can make their nests in its shade. It is not anybody’s guess if anything will
catch hold and grow. Jesus knows what will grow.
b. For me, one of the classic interpretations of this Biblical
passage about the seed growing automatically (Mark 4:26) was written by
Martin Luther when he said about this text:
“After I preach my sermon on Sunday, when I
return home, I drink my little glass of Wittenberg beer and I just let the
gospel run its course.” Luther said that after he pounded on the pulpit and expounded
the gospel, he would go home and enjoy the afternoon.
Luther knew that the power of his sermon was not based on the
power of his preaching. He knew that the power of his sermon was not based on
his eloquence or his abilities. He knew that the power of the sermon would
have no effect whatsoever unless the very Word of God got into a person’s
heart. Luther knew that he couldn’t do that. It was the Holy Spirit who did
that. Luther keenly understood the power of the Word.
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2.
There is
something inside the word that changes us. It is Jesus inside the Word
that gets through to us. Jesus grows in you, just as seeds grow mysteriously
and miraculously.
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a. This does not mean that automatically we are going to be
Christians. That does not mean that automatically we are going to grow to be
a large church. But what it does mean
is that there is power in His Word.
b. As we pick up the Bible and hold it in our hands, we realize
that His Word is not passive. There is something in there. When we partake of this Word, it grows in us. That
is what Jesus was talking about in this text.
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CONCLUSION: This is a parable of
hope. Jesus is saying that the kingdom
is growing and will continue to grow, night and day, year in and year
out, century in and century out, through thick and thin, God’s kingly rule is
going to grow. It is not anybody’s
guess whether it will grow – it’s a certainty. God’s kingdom has grown and will continue
to grow all based on the power of that little seed – His Word. Amen.
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