To read the texts click on the texts: Eph 5:21-33; Lk 13:18-21
In the two parables that make up the text of today, we once
again find the mention of a man and a woman. While in the first parable of the
mustard seed, it is a “man” who sows, in the second parable of the yeast; it is
a “woman” who mixes it.
The parable of the mustard seed is found also in Mark
and Matthew, whereas the parable of the yeast is in Matthew but not in Mark.
The Lukan version of the parable of the mustard seed is the
shortest of the three. It lacks the description of the mustard seed as the
smallest of all seeds (Mt 13:31; Mk 4:31) or the mature plant as “the greatest
of all shrubs” (Mt 13:32; Mk 4:32). The point that Luke seems to be making by
omitting these details is that rather than compare the kingdom to a mighty
cedar, he describes it is terms of an insignificant seed. The emphasis, therefore, is not
on future glory, but on the present sign of its presence. Though like the mustard seed the Kingdom seems small, it is still present, even though it cannot
be seen as clearly as some would like to. In Luke, it is a parable of the
beginnings of the kingdom and not on its final manifestation. The people
expected a spectacular, extra-ordinary cedar, but Jesus preferred to bring the
kingdom as insignificantly as a mustard seed.
The point of the parable of the yeast in Luke is not the same as
the point being made in the parable of the mustard seed. In this parable it is
a clearly a case of small beginnings contrasted with great endings. While the
quantity of yeast is not specified, the use of the word “hid’, indicates that
it is an extremely small quantity. In contrast the three measures of flour that
are leavened are the equivalent of fifty pounds of flour, enough to make bread
for about One hundred fifty people. The kingdom like the yeast will eventually
leaven the whole of humanity.
While the parable of the mustard seed dramatises the presence of
the kingdom in its insignificant beginnings, the parable of the yeast reminds
us that even small beginnings are powerful and eventually change the character
of the whole.
When we realise that with the motley crew that Jesus chose he
could achieve so much in the world, then we realise that his words in the
parable are indeed true. The kingdom does have insignificant beginnings, but
even this insignificant or small beginning has resulted and will continue to
result in great endings.
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