Luke 8:4-15; 2 Corinthians 11:19 –
12:9; Isaiah 55:10-13
In the Name of the Father and of the
+ Son and of the Holy Spirit.
Jesus is the
Sower, and the parable you have just heard is His Seed, His Word. Your ears and
your hearts are the soil: “He who has ears to hear, let him hear.” All soils
“hear,” for hearing is passive and receptive, but not all soils are fruitful.
Indeed, “Many are called, but few are chosen.” And, no soil is called or
fruitful apart from the Seed of the Sower, the Word of the LORD.
A great crowd
of soils was gathered around the Sower, all having ears to hear, and the Sower
began to sow, Jesus began to preach. Now, an enlightened, wise, and efficient
sower sows his seed only in the best of soils. Not so our Lord Jesus. Jesus
sows His Word-Seed indiscriminately, equally, and liberally upon all types of
soils, without any regard to the type or condition of the soil whatsoever –
“For as the rain and the snow come down from heaven and do not return there but
water the earth, making it bring forth and spout, giving seed to the sower and
bread to the eater, so shall My Word be that goes out from My mouth; it shall
not return to Me empty, but it shall accomplish that which I purpose, and shall
succeed in the thing for which I sent it.” Ah, did you catch that? Men of
wisdom count success only in that which produces the desired result of a
fruitful harvest, but the LORD counts success even when soily ears and hearts
do not bear fruit. How can such foolishness be? The Word of the LORD never
fails; it always accomplishes its purpose. Either it is received in
Spirit-created faith and bears fruit, or it is hindered, refused, and rejected
in unbelief. Isn’t it amazing that the all-powerful and all-sufficient Word of
God can be hindered, refused, and rejected? And yet, the LORD “desires all
people to be saved and to come to the knowledge of the truth.” And so, the Lord
sows indiscriminately, equally, and liberally upon all types of soils, without
any regard to the type or condition of the soil whatsoever. Indeed, one of the
purposes for which the Word of the LORD goes forth, Jesus warns, is that
“seeing they may not see, and hearing they may not understand.” For, when the
Word of the LORD is rejected, the soily heart of a man returns to what it was
before – hard, dead, and fruitless. Nevertheless, in the divine mercy,
patience, and forbearance of the LORD, He keeps on sowing, even when His
Word-Seed is hindered, refused, and rejected in unbelief.
And so here
is an aspect of this parable that typically goes unrecognized and unconsidered:
Who does the plowing? At least in three of the conditions of soil Jesus names,
all but the trodden path, the soil has already been broken up and plowed,
prepared to receive the goodly Seed. But, who has done the plowing? As Luther
explains in the Small Catechism, it is the Holy Spirit who has His hand on the
plow: “I believe that I cannot by my own reason or strength believe in Jesus
Christ, my Lord or come to Him; but the Holy Spirit has called me by the
Gospel, enlightened me with His gifts, sanctified and kept me in the true
faith.” Indeed, the Holy Spirit is the active person in and through the
Word-Seed of the LORD, Jesus Christ, the Sower and the Seed. Thus, the plowing,
the sowing, the fruit-bearing, and, ultimately, the harvest, are the LORD’s.
Indeed, the fact that there are various soils in various states of preparedness
is indicative that the Sower has been this way before. The present condition of
the soils reflects what has been done with the goodly Seed the Sower has sown yesterday,
today, and tomorrow for as many tomorrows as the LORD may in His mercy grant,
desiring that all might be saved.
For, once the
Holy Spirit has plowed, once the Sower has sown His goodly Seed, there is work
to do – work in cooperation with the Holy Spirit in retaining what has
been plowed and sown. Mind you, and mind you strongly and assuredly – WE
DO NOT COOPERATE IN ANY WAY IN OUR JUSTIFICATION OR IN THE PRESERVATION OF OUR
JUSTIFICATION, but that is purely and entirely the work of the Holy Spirit who
has “called me by the Gospel, enlightened me with His gifts, sanctified and
kept me in the true faith.” Nonetheless, as we confess in the Formula of
Concord concerning Free Will, “As soon as the Holy Spirit has begun His work of
regeneration and renewal in us through the Word and holy Sacraments, we can and
should cooperate through His power, although still in great weakness (FC II,
65).” Just a few verses following today’s parable, St. Luke records Jesus’
exhortation, “Take care then how you hear.” And then, in the following chapter,
Jesus warns, “No one who puts his hand to the plow and looks back is fit for
the kingdom of God.”
We see this
in action as Jesus describes the conditions of three types of soil, two of which,
although initially receptive to the goodly Word-Seed, even resulting in living
and growing faith, nevertheless remain fruitless. Working backwards, there is
the thorny soil – “those who hear, but as they go on their way they are choked
by the cares and riches and pleasures of life, and their fruit does not
mature.” That is to say that the Word of the LORD and faith have competition in
such soily hearts, all the things, people, pursuits, and passions that you are
tempted to place before the LORD and His Word. These are the things that keep
people from the Word and the Sacraments on Sunday, that keep them from taking
time for meditation on the Holy Scriptures and prayer, that tempt them to set
up idols that demand their fear, love, and trust before and above God. Faith in
such hearts gets choked out and strangled. While it may continue, it does not
and cannot bear the fruits of faith and thus is counted as no faith at all.
Then there is
the rocky soil – “those who, when they hear the Word, receive it with joy. But
these have no root; they believe for a while, and in time of testing fall
away.” Surely, lack of root and moisture are just as dangerous to young and
growing faith as are thorns and weeds. Again, faith is present, alive, and
growing, but it is not being nourished. Such it is with Christians who neglect
their faith and starve it by not drinking deeply from the well of God’s Word
and receiving His Sacraments. Either ignorantly or willfully they refuse to put
on the armor of God and so they remain weak and defenseless against the attack
of the Evil One. And, when trial and tribulation, disease, unemployment, death
come upon them, they have no deep and strong root and so are uprooted and swept
away in the torrential flood of despair. Likewise, when the wisdom of the world
attacks their faith like the scorching sun, having not the moisture of the Word
of the LORD, their faith withers and dies.
And last of the
three unfruitful soils, there is the hard-packed soil of the path – “those who
have heard; then the devil comes and takes away the Word from their hearts, so
that they may not believe and be saved.” Do not think as the Calvinists and
Enthusiasts do that some are predestined to be the path and cannot be plowed
and planted, believe, bear fruit and be saved.
No, but we were all the path at one time, and some of us have likely
returned to path-like status one or more times throughout our pilgrimage. No,
there is hope even for the path, for the Sower continues to sow His Word-Seed
even where it has been rejected in the past – Thanks be to God for His grace
and mercy and patience! Perhaps what you should ponder more when considering
the path is that the devil is eager to steal the Word of the LORD from your
hearts. He doesn’t want you to believe, and he uses a multitude of very
creative and inventive tactics to keep the Word from implanting itself within
your hearts and minds: distractions, pleasures, and entertainment; boredom,
work, and pragmatism; the false wisdom of men which we consider enlightenment
and scientific fact; personal pettiness concerning the pastor, his personality,
voice, preaching style, etc.; self-righteousness which tempts you to puff
yourself up with pride while looking down on others with disdain and contempt,
instead of pity, mercy, compassion, and love. Again, unlike the Calvinists and
Enthusiasts, we must not believe that if we have once believed that we cannot
fall from faith. No, the devil is just as relentless in seeking to devour you
as your LORD is in saving you. Yet, there is still hope for those who have
fallen away, for the Sower keeps on sowing until the day and hour the LORD has
appointed for the harvest. Therefore, you must “take care how you hear” and
keep your hand to the plow without looking back.
But, “some
[seed] fell into good soil and grew and yielded a hundredfold.” Remember, faith
also “grew” in the thorny and rocky soil, but remained fruitless. Only the soil
of faith that produces fruit does Jesus call “good soil.” Moreover, the good
soil not only produces fruit, but it produces a miraculous abundance of fruit,
a “hundredfold.” This is in accord with the teaching of St. James that “faith
apart from works is dead,” and “Show me your faith apart from your works, and I
will show you my faith by my works.” It’s very simple, plain, orthodox,
confessional, Lutheran, Christian doctrine that faith – true, living, and
saving faith – always produces fruit, good works that serve the neighbor and
glorify God. It is enough, it is sufficient for justification that you have
faith, but faith is never alone, but is always active, always working, always
bearing fruit. Thus, Jesus teaches concerning the good soil, “they are those
who, hearing the Word, hold it fast in a an honest and good heart, and bear fruit
with patience.”
Again, the
Holy Spirit plows and prepares the soil your of heart. And, Jesus, the Sower,
sows the Seed of His Word into your heart and makes it fruitful. The LORD is
Sower and the Seed. You are the soil, and you are His, your faith is His work,
and the fruit you bear is His fruit which serves your neighbor and gives glory
to the LORD alone. While your faith, your New Man, indeed cooperates with the
work of the Holy Spirit in and through you, your Old Man, your sinful and
corrupted flesh cooperates with the devil to return the soil of your heart to
the hard-packed path once again. There is nothing that you can do to change the
condition of your soily heart, but the Holy Spirit must continually plow, the
Son must continually sow, and so you are preserved in faith unto salvation by
holding the Word of the LORD fast in an honest and good heart and bearing fruit
with patience. Thus, the Christian faith and life is one of humility,
repentance, and perseverance through all adversity: through trial and
tribulation, through the thorny temptations of the flesh, the passions, and
desires; through the rocky, faith-compromising vices of boredom and
complacency, self-righteousness, pride, and idolatry. These are natural to your
Old Man, and the LORD will permit them to befall you that, by the Holy Spirit,
your faith may be strengthened, that the rocks may be uprooted, the thorns
pulled out, that the root of your faith may grow deeper and stronger in Him,
and you bear His fruit, a hundredfold, to the glory of His Holy Name.
O God, the strength of all who put
their trust in You, mercifully grant that by Your power we may be defended
against all adversity; through Jesus Christ, Your Son, our Lord, who lives and
reigns with You and the Holy Spirit one God, now and forever.
In the + Name of Jesus. Amen.
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