Today, I am reading and commenting on Matthew 13-14.
I am going to skip over the Parable of the Sower today because I don’t feel like I have anything new to say about it (which will not always stop me, but for today) and start with the Parable of the Weeds. There is a phrase used by soldiers and others who favor using violence against evil, “Kill them all and let God sort them out.” That phrase is diametrically opposite to the point which Jesus made with the Parable of the Weeds. Jesus made the point that when we cannot distinguish the good from the evil it is better to leave the evil alone than to harm the good. In fact, a principle generally observed in U.S. law, and that of many other nations, that it is better for 10 guilty people to go free than for one innocent person to suffer judgement derives from this. Jesus made a secondary point in that parable, one which was important enough that He told a second parable which focused on that secondary point. In the Parable of the Weeds Jesus tells us that after the harvest, the weeds will be burned while the wheat will be gathered into the barn. Then in the Parable of the Net, Jesus speaks of a net which gathers all kinds of fish. The good fish would be collected and the bad fish thrown away. He explicitly tells us that the good fish represent those who are righteous and the bad fish those who are wicked.
Jesus tells two other parables here which I want to comment on because I think their message is no longer thought about enough. In one He talks about a mustard seed and in the other He talks about yeast. Both parables tell us not to be disheartened because we think we are insignificant. A mustard seed is tiny, but it grows into a large plant which dominates its surroundings. When you make bread, the yeast is completely overwhelmed by the volume of the other ingredients used, but the yeast completely transforms the dough. So, each of these parables makes the point that we should not think that our actions are of no significance because both the mustard seed and the yeast appear insignificant to those who know not what they are, but both have a big impact. However, each parable has a secondary point. Some of us are called to be like the mustard seed, which changes its environment through determination and consistent effort. And some of us are called to be like the yeast which changes its environment by transforming what is around it (or, in our case, transforming those who are around us). And perhaps some of us are called to do both.
I use the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.