Summary: The importance of sharing our faith.

Reaping

Matthew 13:1-9 NLT

Later that same day, Jesus left the house and went down to the shore, [2] where an immense crowd soon gathered. He got into a boat, where he sat and taught as the people listened on the shore. [3] He told many stories such as this one:

"A farmer went out to plant some seed. [4] As he scattered it across his field, some seeds fell on a footpath, and the birds came and ate them. [5] Other seeds fell on shallow soil with underlying rock. The plants sprang up quickly, [6] but they soon wilted beneath the hot sun and died because the roots had no nourishment in the shallow soil. [7] Other seeds fell among thorns that shot up and choked out the tender blades. [8] But some seeds fell on fertile soil and produced a crop that was thirty, sixty, and even a hundred times as much as had been planted. [9] Anyone who is willing to hear should listen and understand!"

Matthew 13:18-23 NLT

"Now here is the explanation of the story I told about the farmer sowing grain: [19] The seed that fell on the hard path represents those who hear the Good News about the Kingdom and don’t understand it. Then the evil one comes and snatches the seed away from their hearts. [20] The rocky soil represents those who hear the message and receive it with joy. [21] But like young plants in such soil, their roots don’t go very deep. At first they get along fine, but they wilt as soon as they have problems or are persecuted because they believe the word. [22] The thorny ground represents those who hear and accept the Good News, but all too quickly the message is crowded out by the cares of this life and the lure of wealth, so no crop is produced. [23] The good soil represents the hearts of those who truly accept God’s message and produce a huge harvest—thirty, sixty, or even a hundred times as much as had been planted."

This passage of scripture is unique because it contains a parable of Jesus and His own interpretation of the parable. This story clearly teaches that the gospel is a powerful force that will produce fruit.

This parable also teaches that not everyone who hears the gospel will be saved. The gospel only produces fruit in good soil. In the parable, the seed did not produce fruit if a bird ate it, nor will the gospel transform a life if Satan snatches it from their heart before it can bear fruit.

Believe me, that is exactly what Satan wants to do, and we must fight him. We must fight him like Lucas Sibanda recently fought a snake that was trying to eat him.

Lucas Sibanda, a South Africian was walking along a remote path, minding his own business when a python slithered out from behind some shrubs. Sibanda froze. Within a few seconds the snake had wrapped itself around him and began constricting.

Pythons, are large snakes that suffocate its victims before swallowing them whole.

Sibana was trapped. He didn’t know how he would escape. "I decided the only way to save myself from this monster was to bite it just below the head," Sabana told the Star newspaper. He bit, he kicked and he punched the snake until it released him. Sibana killed the reptile with a stick, took it home and skinned it.

(http://newsroom.compuserve.com/nr/story.asp?BTM=odd&art=..\..\rt\Odd\Odd_3.HTM)

We’ve got to fight Satan with the same tenacity, because he wants to steal the gospel we sow.

In the parable, the seed will not produce fruit if it is choked out by weeds, neither will the gospel transform a life if the cares of the world or materialism crowd it from the person’s mind.

The seed will not produce fruit if a rock keeps the roots from spreading, neither will the gospel transform a life if it doesn’t infiltrate the depths of the person’s soul. If it doesn’t, the first problem that comes along will discourage the person, and they’ll fall away and never be saved.

But, when the seed falls in good soil, it bears fruit!

The obedient witness can be assured that the gospel is powerful. Hebrews 4:12 KJV says, “For the word of God is quick, and powerful, and sharper than any two edged sword, piercing even to the dividing asunder of soul and spirit, and of the joints and marrow, and is a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the heart.” God’s word is powerful, make no mistake about it.

Paul said, “For I am not ashamed of the gospel of Christ: for it is the power of God unto salvation to every one that believeth; to the Jew first, and also to the Greek.” Romans 1:16 KJV

The gospel is powerful enough to transform someone’s life! It is a powerful force to be reckoned with. Paul knew the power of the gospel personally. It had transformed him from a persecutor of the church to an apostle, church planter and biblical writer.

The sower is not responsible for the growth of the gospel. He is only responsible to sow the seed and reap the harvest. Are you sowing the seeds so you can reap the harvest, or are you simply criticizing the lifestyles of the soil?

“In 1992, a Los Angeles County parking control officer came upon a brown El Dorado Cadillac illegally parked next to the curb on street-sweeping day.

The officer dutifully wrote out a ticket. Ignoring the man seated at the driver’s wheel, the officer reached inside the open car window and placed the $30 citation on the dashboard.

The driver of the car made no excuses. No argument ensued-and with good reason. The driver of the car had been shot in the head ten to twelve hours before but was sitting up, stiff as a board, slumped slightly forward, with blood on his face. He was dead.

The officer, preoccupied with ticket-writing, was unaware of anything out of the ordinary. He got back in his car and drove away.

Many people around us are ‘dead in transgressions and sins.’ What should catch our attention most is their need, not their offenses. They don’t need a citation; they need a Savior.” (Rowell)

Who should we witness to? A Witness should broadcast the gospel to all people. We are called to sow the seed and reap the harvest, not inspect the soil!

It is an intentional action–“go out to sow.” There is a purpose behind the action. He didn’t take a stroll; he went out to sow the seed.

It is an act of duty--a farmer sows and reaps. A doctor heals, an accountant counts, and a Christian witnesses.

Like Peter and John Acts 4:19-20 KJV we must be compelled to witness, they said, “Whether it be right in the sight of God to hearken unto you more than unto God, judge ye. [20] For we cannot but speak the things which we have seen and heard.”

Is there a harvest to reap if we are willing to share our faith? Absolutely, this parable teaches it.

“Many have been ‘won by one.’ John Bunyan, author of Pilgrim’s Progress, came to Christ by overhearing three women talking intimately with joy of the things of Christ. William Carey, the father of modern missions, was won to Christ by John Warr, a fellow apprentice shoe cobbler. Dwight L. Moody, America’s greatest evangelist, was led to Christ by Mr. Kimberly, a Sunday School teacher, in the rear of a shoe store on Court Street in Boston. It was an unknown lay preacher who won Charles Spurgeon to Christ in a little chapel on a snowy morning, where only few were present, with the text "Look unto me, and be ye saved, all the ends of the earth" (Isa. 45:22). Afterward Spurgeon said of this preacher, "The preacher was a poor, uneducated man who had never had a training for the ministry and probably will never be heard of in this life. He was a man engaged in a humble business during the week. He was a poor man, a humble shoemaker or something of that sort." (Browne, p. 38-9)

Going, weeping, sowing, and reaping. Are you willing to share? This parable assumes something that I can’t assume. That the sower will go out to sow. It assures us that there will be a harvest, but it assumes the sower is sowing.

Are you involved? Will you be?