The Bible Recap - Day 287 (Matthew 13, Luke 8) - Year 6
Episode Date: October 14, 2024SHOW NOTES: - Head to our Start Page for all you need to begin! - Join the RECAPtains - Check out the TBR Store - Show credits BIBLE READING & LISTENING: Follow along on the Bible App, or to lis...ten to the Bible, try Dwell! SOCIALS: The Bible Recap: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter/X | TikTok D-Group: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter/X TLC: Instagram | Facebook D-GROUP: D-Group is brought to you by the same team that brings you The Bible Recap. TBR is where we read the Bible, and D-Group is where we study the Bible. D-Group is an international network of Bible study groups that meet weekly in homes, churches, and online. Find or start one near you today! DISCLAIMER: The Bible Recap, Tara-Leigh Cobble, and affiliates are not a church, pastor, spiritual authority, or counseling service. Listeners and viewers consume this content on a voluntary basis and assume all responsibility for the resulting consequences and impact. Links to specific resources and content: This is not an endorsement of the entire website, author, organization, etc.. Their views may not represent our own.
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Hey Bible readers, I'm Tara Lee Cobble and I'm your host for the Bible Recap.
Jesus loves a good parable.
It's one of his favorite teaching tools.
A parable is a short story that usually has one main point or idea, though occasionally
more, and it's often generalized, meaning there are no specific people or places listed,
just broad facts.
Today, when we meet up with Jesus by the Sea of Galilee,
he's got a lot of parables for us.
We'll only cover the main one today,
and tomorrow we'll talk about the others.
This is a parable about the gospel.
Jesus compares it to a seed.
The seed of the gospel is spread all around,
and it falls on lots of different types of soil,
four to be exact. So this is often called the parable of the sower or the parable of the gospel is spread all around and it falls on lots of different types of soil. Four, to be exact.
So this is often called the parable of the sower or the parable of the four soils.
The soils represent four different ways the gospel can be received.
The bad news is, three out of the four soils don't receive the gospel very well.
We'll look at why in a second.
But the good news is, the one soil that does produces lots of fruit from the seed.
In fact, it's up to a 100-fold increase.
The first soil is the path, but the birds come and devour the seed.
Jesus compares this to anyone who hears the gospel but doesn't really understand it.
Then the enemy comes and snatches it away.
Jesus says it's not important for people to just hear the gospel, but for people to understand it.
Otherwise, the enemy will come along like
a bird and snatch it up before it takes root. The second soil is the rocky ground. There's
not a lot of soil there and what exists isn't very deep. Jesus compares this to the people
who respond to the gospel quickly and with joy, but as soon as tough times come, that
plant can't take the heat and it withers. Those who follow Christ are promised trials, and if someone claims to have faith but isn't
rooted deeply, persecution will wilt them.
Persecution is one of the ways our hearts are revealed.
Are we after only the blessings God promises his kids?
Or are we truly after God himself?
The third soil is the thorny soil.
The seed takes root but the thorn grows up around it, choking it and crowding it out.
Jesus compares the thorn to the cares of the world and the deceitfulness of riches.
I find it interesting that both trials and abundance can overtake the seed.
Things we view as curses and things we view as blessings can both serve to reveal our hearts.
Finally, there's the good soil.
The one who hears the gospel, understands it, and bears fruit.
If I were a Baptist preacher, I would give these four soils names that all start with
the same letter, like maybe the simple, the shallow, the selfish, and the solid.
But I'm not, so I won't.
You heard nothing.
Moving on, we just talked about the parable and the explanation.
But when Jesus first tells the parable,
He doesn't give the explanation.
He just talks about the seeds and soil.
He's talking to a big group of people
from a lot of different towns,
and He's all, seeds this and soils that.
Then His disciples pull Him aside and say,
hey, no one knows what you're talking about.
And He says, exactly, I'm doing that on purpose.
For you guys, you'll
get it. For the people with hard hearts, they won't. Be grateful for the blessing of your
soft hearts and open ears, because you're getting to see and hear and know something
that very few people have ever experienced. Then he goes on to explain the nuances of
the parable of the soils to his disciples, but not to the whole crowd. I'll be honest,
on my first trip through scripture,
this was the single most challenging passage for me.
I almost gave up on this day.
I didn't like it at all.
It felt like Jesus was being mean.
One of my mentors encouraged me to zoom out
on everything I had learned about God
from reading the Old Testament,
as well as the purpose and timing of the ministry of Jesus.
It was hard not to bring my own ideas
of what was right and best to this passage.
If you're like, what's the big deal, Tara Lee?
Then great, you're miles ahead of where I was
on my first trip through the Bible.
I really had to work to remind myself
of what Jesus has proven so far in his ministry.
Performing signs and speaking truth doesn't change hearts.
Only the spirit changes hearts.
This shook up my theology in the best way possible.
So if this hits you sideways too, hang in there.
The good stuff is always on the other side of your question.
Press in.
Don't give up on Him.
Keep seeing what He says about Himself in His Word.
Keep seeing what those who know Him best testify to be true of Him.
After Jesus finishes telling all his parables today, he goes back to Capernaum and teaches in the synagogue.
We've read about this scene before, but there are two things worth noting in Matthew's account.
First, we see that he has at least seven brothers and sisters, James, Joseph, Simon, Judas, and all
his sisters, which means at least three or more. The second thing worth noting is that they call his dad Joseph a carpenter, but this
is actually a misunderstanding from the original translation.
The word used here in Greek is tekton, which means a builder or a craftsman.
When the good people in England first translated the Bible to English, they assumed this meant
carpenter because the builders and craftsmen in England used wood.
But for the most part, builders and craftsmen in ancient Israel and even modern Israel primarily
use stone.
Almost everything there is built out of stone.
I've heard estimates that most builders in Jesus' day would have worked with about 20
to 30% wood and about 70 to 80% stone.
All that to say, Jesus was probably more of a stone mason than a carpenter, which
makes a lot of sense when we read through the stories he tells us and the analogies
he uses. Lots of places in scripture refer to him as the stone that the builders rejected
who became the cornerstone. And as a tecton, he has been shaping things out of rock since
the first day of creation, starting with the earth itself.
Keep your eyes peeled because you'll see him using rock imagery everywhere.
Luke 8 opens by telling us that in addition to the twelve apostles, there were a few women
who apparently traveled with them as well, namely Mary Magdalene, Joanna, Susanna, and
more.
This is remarkable, honestly.
There are some circles where this would be unacceptable even today.
So for Jesus to be on board with having women as disciples who traveled with him in ancient Israel
just goes to show how much he values the contributions of women in the kingdom.
It sounds like these women are caretakers of some sort
because verse 3 says they provided for them out of their means.
Among these women are some who probably have great wealth
and status like Joanna, who is married
to King Herod's household manager,
as well as women who have poor social standing
like Mary Magdalene, who once had seven demons
until Jesus cast them out.
And this is where my God shot showed up today.
Not just the fact that women are included,
but all the diversity of his closest followers.
The crew Jesus traveled with included poor fishermen, wealthy tax collectors, family
members of the king's entourage, and a woman who once had seven demons.
He kept a wide range of company.
Jesus, as it turns out, is not just for all nations of people, but all types of people—rich,
poor, polished, and unkempt.
He proves that the thorny pleasure of wealth and status can't choke out every seed, and
that the scorching trials of the demonic can't wither some seeds, and that even the simple
fishermen who might not appear to have depth and who aren't just rocky soil but might
even be rocks themselves, like Peter the Pebble, can still, against all odds, bear fruit.
One of the beautiful things about a sovereign God is that he can take the most unlikely
soil and turn it into a garden.
He's where the joy is.
Hey Bible readers, it's time for our weekly check-in.
How are you doing?
First of all, you're here.
You keep showing up.
I'm so proud of you. Remember when I mentioned that the parable of the seeds was the passage I
had the hardest time with during my first trip through the Bible? I just want
to remind you, if you're stuck on a passage, any passage, whether that's from
today or the books we've already read or something you read in the days to come,
keep going. You're not alone and the good stuff is on the other side of this struggle.
Wherever you are, you're right on time and God is with you.
He's gonna meet you in your confusion and your frustration. And if you haven't been confused or frustrated, that's amazing.
I'm so glad to hear that. I'm cheering you all on, and I'll see you back here tomorrow to keep making our way through the New Testament together.