To read the texts click on the texts: 1 Cor 15:35-37,42-49; Lk 8:4-15
The text of today combines both the Parable of the Sower (8:5-8) and the allegory (8:11-15) {in an allegory, every element in the story is
given a meaning. So, the seed is regarded as the word of God, those along the
path are the ones who hear, and then the devil comes and takes away the word
from their hearts, so that they may not believe an be saved, and so on}.
Though
it is true that the Sower disappears from the scene after he is first
mentioned, and the seed takes centre stage, the parable is really one of
contrast between the beginning and the middle, and the end. Thus, the Sower
(whom the end will affect) is still an important figure in the parable. Since
many have confused the allegory with the Parable, the meaning of the parable
may have been missed. In this reflection we will focus on the Parable.
The farmer would sow along “the path”, because according to
research done on the agricultural practices in Palestine at the time of Jesus, the practice
was to sow seeds first and then plough it into the ground. Sowing on “rocky
ground” is not surprising because the underlying limestone, thinly covered with
soil, barely showed above the surface until the ploughshare jarred against it.
Sowing among “thorns” is also understandable, because this too will be ploughed
up. Though the ploughing of the three kinds of soil above will be done, it will
result in a loss, because in none of them will the seed grow. It will seem that
seventy-five percent of the effort is lost. While most of the parable focuses
on “sowing”, in the last verse it is already “harvest time”. The abnormal,
exaggerated tripling, of the harvest’s yield (thirty, sixty, a hundredfold)
symbolises the overflowing of divine fullness., surpassing all human measure
and expectations (A tenfold harvest counted as a good harvest and a yield of
seven and a half as an average one).
To human eyes much of the labour seems
futile and fruitless, resulting in repeated failure, but Jesus is full of
joyful confidence; he knows that God has made a beginning, bringing with it a harvest of reward beyond all asking or conceiving. In spite of every failure
and opposition, from hopeless beginnings, God brings forth the triumphant end,
which he has promised.
Do I usually focus more on the reaping than on the sowing? Do I
focus more on the result than on the action? Do I focus more on the future than
on the present?
How do I react when most of my effort seems to be in vain? Do I
throw up my hands in despair? Do I give up? Do I get despondent? Or do I carry
on despite all odds? Do I continue to persevere? Do I keep on keeping on?
How attached am I to the result of my action? Can I plunge into
the din of battle and leave my heart at the feet of the Lord?
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