13 June 2021
Saint Athanasius Lutheran Church
Pentecost 3 Vienna, VA
“His Seed, His Kingdom,
His Growth”
Text:
Mark 4:26-34; Ezekiel 17:22-24
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race, mercy, and peace to you from God our
Father, and from our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. Amen.
Have you ever planted a
seed and hoped it didn’t grow? That’s ridiculous, right?
So it is with God and His
Word. He wants those seeds that are planted by His pastors preaching His Word
and by His people speaking His Word to grow and to bear fruit in the hearts and
lives of those who hear. But how that happens, and when, and where,
and how much, and how big, that is out of our control. And out of
our understanding.
Sometimes we know why
those seeds and plants do NOT grow and produce fruit. That was the point
of a parable Jesus told right before the ones we heard today. Sometimes the
cares of life choke the seed of His Word, or the trials and troubles of life
scorch it, or the temptations of satan
and the world pluck it out. You’ve probably experienced all those things in
your own life. You’re sitting in church and hearing the Word but your mind is a
thousand miles away, worrying, obsessing, preoccupied.
And the seed of the Word just bounces off your ears, heart, or mind, or is
plucked or scorched.
But that’s not the focus
of the Word Jesus speaks to us today. Today it is rather how and where
and why it DOES grow. And it does quite apart from us and our
efforts.
Oh, to be sure, there are
things we do to help. We plow the ground, we try to plant the seeds properly,
we try to control the weeds and the pests, we apply
fertilizer. But none of those things make the seed grow. That happens
quite apart from us. In fact, you can do everything right and have nothing
grow. Or, you wind up with some seeds that come up and some that don’t. And
wonder why?! Same seed, same garden, same care - why didn’t it all come up? And
then the plants that do . . . some produce a lot of fruit, while others produce
very little. Why is that?
It is out of our control
and beyond our understanding.
And so it is with the
kingdom of God and the seed of His Word, Jesus says. And so these parables
spoken to us today are not a call to action - what to do and how to do
it to get the kingdom of God to grow; but rather a call to TRUST. That it’s God’s kingdom and God’s seed and God’s growth.
Only He can do it.
Which
is hard for us. It’s hard to trust when what we really want to do is
roll our sleeves up and get to work! To make things happen when and where and
how we want them! And while, as Christians, we don’t do nothing - we still speak God’s Word and plant His seed, as
we are called to do - but we also can’t make it grow. So we are called to
patience and trust. That maybe, just maybe, God knows what He’s doing. And
maybe, just maybe, it’s not necessarily what we want or think.
Luther spoke to this.
Just a couple of years after posting the 95 Theses, things were moving in
Germany - but certainly not how Luther thought they would! He thought
posting those Theses would lead to a theological debate among the theologians
and faculty of the University - not to the movement that was spreading
through Germany and not to His being called before the Emperor and then
being excommunicated! The seed was working and growing far differently than he
thought or ever could have imagined. And certainly more than he ever
could have done himself.
And yet it wasn’t moving fast
enough for some others, including one Andreas Bodenstein
von Karlstadt. Karlstadt
was trying to lead the churches in Wittenberg while Luther was in protective
custody in the Wartburg Castle after the Diet of Worms. But Karlstadt
wanted things to move faster. He was trying to force the issue. But his actions
weren’t helping, but hurting. It was as if he was trying to help that little
seedling - like the one on the cover of your bulletin today - grow, by pulling
up on it to make it bigger! But you know what that does! That just kills it.
So Luther left the safety
of the Wartburg and returned to Wittenberg and preached a series of sermons to
try to calm things down. And he gave kind of a German twist on Jesus’ parable
that we heard today, saying: I simply taught, preached, and wrote God’s Word; [that
is, I just planted the seed] otherwise I did nothing. And while I
slept, or drank Wittenberg beer with my friends Philip and Amsdorf, the Word [did
the work]. I did nothing; the Word did everything.
But
what about today? It certainly doesn’t seem to be working like that
today. Maybe that’s frustrating, or disappointing to you. If you’re like me,
you’d rather be in control; have the kingdom of God grow how and where and when
I want it to. Like here! I came here to this church 19
years ago and I thought, and if I had my way, we would have had more folks and
our own building a long time ago. But here we are. Not as I planned. Not as I
thought. Maybe we blame ourselves - we didn’t do things right, or enough, or
well enough. But while there is surely much we didn’t do right or could have
done better, it may just be that God’s time is different than our time, and His
ways different than our ways.
For the kingdom of God has
grown here. Many people have come and gone and heard the Word. Maybe they grew
here. Maybe they will grow more someplace else. But the growth of a church is
not the same as the growth of the kingdom of God. Individual churches grow and
shrink, open and close, come and go - but the kingdom of God lasts forever; is
bigger than any one church.
Or
country. For think about the United States.
The church and its influence seems to be declining
here. But in Africa - where it flourished in the early church and produced some
of the church’s great theologians, but then suffered under the smothering and
conquest of Islam - it is growing again. In South America it is growing, while
in Europe it is largely ignored, and many huge, beautiful, glorious churches
sit empty. How hard for us to understand that. Why some, not others. Why there,
not here. Maybe impossible.
The seed sprouts
and grows; he knows not how.
So we are called to TRUST,
to HUMILITY, and to PATIENCE. That’s it’s
God’s seed, God’s kingdom, and God’s growth, not ours. To pray in the Lord’s
Prayer THY kingdom come, and mean it. How and where and when He
decides.
Which
is hard. It’s always been hard. We heard from the prophet
Ezekiel today, words that he spoke while many of the people of Israel were in
exile in Babylon, in the midst of their 70 years of exile there; when
they hadn’t been there very long and still had a long time to go. Not what they
had in mind.
But Ezekiel preaches what
God was going to do. He was going to take a young, tender branch from the top
of a tall, majestic cedar tree, and plant it. And it would grow, large and
noble and produce much fruit. That tall, majestic cedar was King David, when Israel
was at its greatest and most glorious. That young, tender
branch, Jesus. But He would not be planted now, and not as soon as the
people wanted. Only after Israel had been chopped down.
Very few of the people who heard Ezekiel would be alive to go back to
Jerusalem at the end of those 70 years. And none of them would be alive
when that branch was planted in Jerusalem. They were called to TRUST. To trust the Word of the Lord. To trust their heavenly
Father, that He would do it. And by such trust, that is, faith, in God their
heavenly Father and His promises, they would be saved. Their sins forgiven, not
held against them. And while they wouldn’t get to see earthly Jerusalem again,
they would get to live in the heavenly Jerusalem.
In fact, it took almost
600 years after Ezekiel spoke these words for that seed to be planted! God
REALLY doesn’t think and do as we do! And how little and
insignificant that seed, that little branch. A young,
unknown, virgin nobody from Nazareth, who wasn’t even married. The little backwater town of Bethlehem. That birth didn’t
make the front page of the Bethlehem Post - Caesar’s census and taxation was
surely the headline that day! And the injustice of it all! That baby in the
manger didn’t catch anyone’s attention . . . not at first; just a few
shepherds, and who cares about them? Later King Herod noticed - that was news! When he killed a bunch of babies for seemingly no reason other than
his madness.
But what turned out
greater? What still impacts the world today? What man did for his own kingdoms? Caesar and his tax?
Herod and his insanity? Or that baby and what He did?
When that Seed was planted and grew. When that young tender
branch turned into a deadly cross. And when that Seed planted in the
grave then grew again, into a tree spanning centuries and continents, and in
which men, women, and children of every nation, tribe, people, and language
find rest and refuge. A kingdom in which men, women, and
children find forgiveness, life, and hope.
And into that kingdom,
HIS kingdom, each of you have been brought. The seed
planted by a faithful mother or father bringing you to be baptized. Or by a
faithful mother, father, friend, or spouse speaking the Word to you. A seed that grew. That God caused to grow.
Maybe you’ve planted
those seeds and haven’t seen the growth you want; it doesn’t seem to be
working. But the how, the when, and the where is not up to you. We are called to trust, humility, and
patience.
We are called to TRUST,
that our heavenly Father wants all those seeds to grow, and is always working
for the good of all people, and to repent that we don’t always believe
that.
We are called to HUMILITY,
that we don’t know and don’t understand all that our heavenly Father is doing,
and to repent when we think we do, or insist that He do things our way,
or complain when He doesn’t.
And we are called to PATIENCE,
that maybe, like Israel, we’ll never get to see the growth, that it will only
happen after we are gone, and to repent of our impatience, our
impulsiveness, our now or never thinking.
And to confess that God’s
Word is true. God’s love is sure. And God’s ways are best.
But also do not
underestimate what you do, the seeds that you plant, and do not to give up. It
may seem pretty small and insignificant, what you do, as small as, well, a tiny
mustand seed in a pretty big world. But with such
tiny seeds God is able to accomplish much. It is for us to plant, to speak the
Word. It is for God to grant the growth.
And He has. And He will
continue. As we drink deeply of His forgiveness and Word here, as we eat and
drink the Son’s Body and Blood. God is tending us and granting us growth. Maybe
you don’t feel it, see it, or understand it. But we’re not called to those
things, but to trust, to humility, and to patience. The
seed, the Word, does its work. The Word that called all things into being in
the beginning, the Word which became flesh and redeemed all of creation from
sin, the Word proclaimed, poured, and fed to us here, and the Word that will
call us out of our graves on the Last Day to everlasting life.
That Word is living,
active, and powerful. And working. We may not know
how. We may not understand. But your Father in heaven does. And He is working. In us, and in the world. The kingdom of
God growing. That as we just sang:
That in these gray and
latter days,
There may be those whose life is praise,
Each life a high doxology
To
Father, Son, Spirit (LSB #834 v. 4).
To
the King, the Seed, and the Grower.
He is working, dear
Christians.
Rest and be confident in
Him.
In the Name of the Father, and of the (+)
Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.
Now the peace of God which passes all understanding, keep your hearts and minds through faith in Christ Jesus, our Lord. Amen.