The story that Jesus
told of the sowing of the seeds, and what became of them, is one of
the first we ever learn, isn’t it? We drew pictures, in Sunday
School, or in our primary school Scripture lessons, of the sower,
with his trayful of seeds, and squiggly seagulls swooping down to
grab them before they could take root, hot sun shining on others, and
lovely scribbly weeds choking still others.... and a few, just a very
few, ears of wheat standing up in a field.
And then, perhaps, as
we grew older and began to stay in Church rather than go to Sunday
School, we would hear sermons on this parable, and if you are
anything like me, what you heard – not, I should emphasize,
necessarily what had been said, but what you heard – was that
Proper People, or perhaps I should say Proper Christians, were the
ones who were the fertile soil, where the Word could take root, grow
and flourish.
But, of course, if you
were anything like me, that just made you feel guilty and miserable –
what if you weren’t the good soil? What if you were the stony
places, or the weedy patches? And I’m sure that there are times
when we do allow other things to take priority, perhaps when we ought
not. And there are times when we do rather wither up, in times of
spiritual drought. All of us go through them, of course. But it
doesn’t help when the preacher starts banging on about how dreadful
we are if we are not 100% fully fertile soil, and bearing fruit 100%.
We just end up feeling guilty and thinking that we must be terrible
people.
But I don’t think
Jesus meant us to think that! After all, we are told over and over
again how much we are loved, and St Paul reminds us, in the reading
we heard from his letter to the Romans, that if we live according to
the Spirit, we won’t be the barren ground Jesus talks about! Of
course, again, if you are like me, you’re apt to think that you
can’t possibly be living according to the Spirit, because,
pride.... but that’s stupid! Why would we not be, if we are
committed to being Jesus’ person? You might remember last week’s
reading, where St Paul was being upset about the fact that he found
it nearly impossible not to do wrong things, but now he is triumphant
– God’s Spirit enables him to live as he should. And us, too.
Going back to the story
of the sower for a moment, I think that it’s not so much that any
given one of us is barren ground, or weedy, or stony, or fertile –
but that each of us has all of those characteristics within us.
Think, for a moment. Sometimes it’s really easy to be God’s
person, we can’t think of anything else we’d rather be. Other
times, not so much! Times when we are tempted to sin, or times when
we want to do something that isn’t necessarily sinful, but isn’t
going to help our spiritual lives. Times when we know God is asking
us to do something that we would really rather not.... you know the
kind of thing.
But the thing is, if –
or rather as – we are living according to the Spirit, we are able
to allow God to help us grow and change. We don’t have to struggle
to be good, we don’t have to struggle to turn ourselves into
fertile ground! That part of it is God’s job. All we have to do
is to be willing to let that happen.
And, meanwhile,
sometimes we are the sowers ourselves – often, maybe, we don’t
even know it. Again, it’s probably as well when we don’t –
nothing worse than a rather forced presentation of the Gospel as
someone tries to explain, embarrassed, why they follow Christ. But
sometimes, who knows, just a “Good morning”, or a smile in the
right place can tip the balance for someone who may have been
despairing; a box of pasta or even tampons in the food bank box might
make all the difference to someone’s summer holidays.
I was reading about a
church in Colorado whose congregation was mostly elderly, with no
young families, but who wanted, and prayed for, a youth group. One
day, their minister was sitting in a coffee shop when he was
approached by a group of young people who asked whether his church
was a place where people could say goodbye to friends who had died.
He explained that it was, and they explained that one of their
friends had just died of an overdose, but his parents had taken his
body home before there could be any funeral. The young people were
allowed to use the church to hold their own funeral – no hymns or
prayers, but they spent time telling stories about their friend, and
then ate a meal that church members had prepared for them. One of
them said “Oh, I wish we could eat like this every week – it
reminds me of my grandma’s cooking!” And the church members said
“Well, of course you can – we’re here every Sunday; you come
and bring your friends!” Those young people may never attend
worship at that Church, but the congregation still loves them and
cares for them and feeds them every Sunday.
Nearer home, a friend
of a friend had four tiny children, including twins, when her husband
was diagnosed with terminal cancer. She was left widowed, but her
local church stepped up to the mark and started to care for her,
bringing her meals, babysitting, finding clothes for the children
that, perhaps, their own children had outgrown but which were still
good, and generally caring for her. I believe that she is now a
pillar of that church, although before her husband died she had no
idea of faith.
What I’m trying to
say is that often it’s not what we say that is the seed we are
sowing, it’s what we do. And not putting pressure on people –
the church in Colorado knew that they would lose the young people if
they started insisting they came to church, or even conformed to any
kind of dress code when they entered the building. My friend’s
church knew that someone with four small children would find coming
to church very difficult, even if they had wanted to come.
We may never be in
exactly that sort of situation, but there will always be times when
we are called to love people into the Kingdom of God. Our duty is to
do the loving we’re called to do – and it’s God’s job to
worry about the results! Whether the seed falls on the path, or on
stony ground, weedy ground, or a fertile field isn’t our business –
our job is to sow the seeds. And our job is also to allow God the
Holy Spirit to live in us and transform more and more of us into
fertile ground in which God’s Word can bear fruit.
I want to conclude this
morning by giving a brief testimony of God’s love and care for me.
I got a bad pain in my ribs last week, and because it wasn’t going
away, I took it to the doctor. Who decided that it was probably
nothing, but that I ought to go to A&E anyway, just in case. So
I hopped on the first bus that came along and went up to Tommy’s.
Well, if you’ve been to hospital lately you’ll know how much of
it is hurry up and wait. To be fair, most of the waiting is while
test results are coming in – and they did do a great many tests,
and ended up keeping me in overnight. And then in the morning they
said I would have to have a CAT scan. Which duly happened, and then
it was hurry up and wait all over again. I was just thinking that if
I’d known there would be all this palaver, I wouldn’t have gone
to the doctor in the first place, when they came to tell me that not
only did I have a chest infection, I had blood clots on both lungs!
Well, that part of it
is all under control with various medications, and I’m fine – but
what if I hadn’t gone to the doctor? What if the doctor hadn’t
sent me to A&E, which she only did as a precaution? What if....
Well, we are never told
what would have happened, but I get a bit cold thinking that I had
rather a narrow escape! And I can’t help thinking how wonderful God
is to prompt me to go to the doctor in the first place, and to prompt
the doctor to send me to A&E – and, maybe, to prompt the
medical team there to ensure I had the CAT scan. God is good!
God is good, and, going
back to our theme, if we say “Yes” to God, God will help us
become more and more fertile ground for growing seed and producing
fruit; God will help us live by the Spirit, the life that leads to
life. And God will help us sow seeds that may or may not fall in
fertile ground. Amen.