Today we are continuing our series called The Kingdom of God is like… and hearing yet another parable from Jesus about the kingdom of God. Remember, a parable is an earthly story that tells about the kingdom of God. We’ve heard two – both centered around farming.
We’ve heard so far… …The Kingdom of God is like a farmer sowing seed – it lands on a lot of different soil types and has a lot of different results; just as God’s Word falls on lots of different heart types and has a lot of different results. …The Kingdom of God is like a growing seed – the seed grows with repetitive, repeated, faithful, and persistent care; just as the seed of faith grows with repetitive, repeated, faithful and persistent use of God’s Word. Today we are adding yet another farming parable to our list of Jesus’ parables and it’s going to teach us yet another facet of God’s kingdom. Before we begin, let’s pray: O Lord, strengthen us by the truth; your Word is the truth. Open our eyes to see what you want us to see; open our ears to hear what you want us to hear; open our hearts to believe what you would have us believe. Amen. I. The Story of the Mustard Seed The parable is taken from Mark 4 which is the same chapter that the last two parables are from. So, it’s quite likely that Jesus tells it as a follow up to the other two parables that we mentioned before. I love Jesus’ opening introduction to the parable in verse 30: Again Jesus said, “What shall we say the kingdom of God is like, or what parable shall we use to describe it?” You kind of get the impression that the disciples need some help. They sat through two parables of Jesus – two teachings about the kingdom of God. The first one they were confused about. After the second one, didn’t seem to help much. They must have been a lot of blank stares. And now Jesus, the omniscient, Lord of heaven and earth, is trying to explain the divinely complete and eternally developed kingdom of God to these temporal, finite, and much simpler humans. It’s kind of like trying to give directions to someone who doesn’t really know the area. Has that ever happened to you? Maybe you’re trying to get them to church. You tell them: Head south on Falls of Neuse until you get to Newton Rd. Turn left and then it’ll be the little brown church to the right. Blank stare. Do you know where Ravenscroft is? The library? It’s in that general vicinity. Scratching their heads. Go to the Han Dee Hugo Station. Turn left. Go 2500 feet. Turn left into the Parking lot with the sign for Gethsemane Lutheran Church. Still nothing. SIGH. Just take my GPS. Jesus shares that frustration. Trying to teach the things of God to puny minded humans beings. So he says… The kingdom of God is like a mustard seed, which is the smallest seed you plant in the ground. (v.31) Question: If you wanted a BIG plant to grow in your garden, how big a seed would you need to plant? The bigger the seed; the bigger the plant, right? A sunflower seed. A pumpkin seed. An avocado pit. They’re pretty big in the world of seeds; they must produce big plants. It makes sense. But… What about a mustard seed? Have you ever seen one of those? (Think of the Grey Poupon Mustard jar.) They are super tiny and barely visible if I held one up for you in the front of church. In fact, it’s so tiny – that if I planted it – and if anything grew from it – I’d expect it to be a tiny, little grass sprout. That’s it. But… When planted, the seed grows and becomes the largest of all garden plants, with such big branches that the birds of the air can perch in its shade. (v.32) It’s bigger than a sunflower. Bigger than a pumpkin plant. Bigger than an avocado bush. It’s basically a tree. About 6, 7, 8 foot high. Big enough that birds land in its branch. All of that happens from this little seed. It’s amazing. Such a small, insignificant seed leads to an incredibly significant plant! II. False Expectations What’s the point of Jesus’ story? Is Jesus just a really big fan of mustard? Should we all go to Food Lion and grab a yellow, squeezable bottle of French’s mustard to put in the offering plate next Sunday? Remember – a parable is an earthly story that teaches us about the kingdom of God. So… Think about it… What is God trying to teach us about His kingdom? This past Monday at 9:30am I went to a local retirement home. It’s something that I’ve been doing for about 5 years now. I head to the home. I do an acapella, communion-less version of today’s service. I tell the people there about Jesus. To be fair – when we first started, they put me on in the big living room area. And…I’m pretty loud. It wasn’t hard to get people’s attention. There was plenty of room. Usually we’d gather together about 20 some people to worship Jesus on a given Monday. But… Recently they relocated me to a much smaller side room because some thought I was a bit of a distraction. Recently the Lifestyle Coordinator that I worked with was replaced with a new coordinator. Recently that side room has become a storage room of sorts - scrunching the chairs and causing us to lose space to Thanksgiving decorations. This past Monday morning...there was one lady who joined me for worship. It wasn’t the one who shouts “Amen.” It wasn’t the one who sings along. It wasn’t the one who nods at key points of the sermon. It was the one who falls asleep about 3 minutes in. I will not lie. I started to think: What’s the point? Why be here? It isn’t anything BIG. It isn’t anything SIGNIFICANT. This can’t be the work of God because it isn’t BIG and SIGNIFCANT enough! You ever thought like that? Have you ever thought… Why am I attending this INSIGNIFICANT church service? It’s not even Christmas Eve. It’s some random service in October. Why am I telling my kids this INSIGNIFCANT Bible story? They don’t even look like they’re listening. Why am I making this INSIGNIFICANT invite to worship? My friend couldn’t care less. Why am I prepping for this INSIGNIFCANT Sunday School class? There’ll be, what, 2 kids here? Why would I have my child baptized? It’s an INSIGNIFICANT splash of water. What could it possibly do! Friends, we are buying into a LIE. Work in God’s Kingdom needs to SEEM SIGNIFICANT or it will BE INSIGNIFICANT. The lie suddenly becomes: Every time I share the message of Jesus; it needs to be greeted with SHOUTS of joy or it was worthless… Each worship service needs strobe lights and smoke machines or it’s not really work in God’s kingdom. Each Bible passage on Facebooks need to go viral or it will be utterly worthless. Each time I teach kids, I need about 30 of them, lined up – like soldiers – listening to my words like the kids from Sound of Music or I might as well quit trying. Careful. You’re listening to The Lie. And it’s most dangerous when it comes to personally connecting with God. Because we think: I need to go to climb some mountain, in some freezing Antarctic culture and find a Sherpa on the very summit. That’s SIGNIFICANT and that’s connecting with God. I need to go to some forest, deep in the jungle, to find a TEMPLE OF DOOM and an ancient artifact that will solve God for me. That’s SIGNIFICANT. That’s the way to God. I need to spend hours in a laboratory, dissecting, experimenting, and divulging in order to unlock the secret God particle. That would be SIGNIFICANT and that would be the way to Him. I need to give thousands of dollars to some charity to get my name on one of their plaques to ensure that God might like me. That’s SIGNIFICANT and maybe then God would pay attention to me! We envision these grandiose ideals on how to connect with God, when God has simply, clearly made himself absolutely accessible through something seemingly insignificant. A book. The Bible. Friends, if this what you believe - That’s God’s Kingdom only shows up in the SEEMINGLY SIGNIFICANT. In the BIG Seed. In the FLASHING LIGHTS seed. In the ABSOLUTELY IMPRESSIVE seed… You are in danger of missing it altogether. III. The Unexpected Reality Like many of the people at Jesus’ time… They expected the Savior to be look like someone SIGNIFICANT. Like a king coming from a beautiful palace. Like some soldier with a giant sword. Like a general with a myriad of soldiers behind him. Like an activist enacting visibly massive political upheaval. But that’s not what they saw in Jesus. Instead of a beautiful palace, he came from a feeding trough in some dilapidated barn. Instead of a giant sword, he swung a carpenter’s hammer. Instead of a myriad of soldiers, he had 12 disciples – 4 fishermen, an accountant, a political activist, a betrayer and 5 guys whose jobs were so insignificant they aren’t even written down in Scripture. Instead of massive visual political upheaval, thee enacted invisible personal, spiritual change. Even in his death – He seemed insignificant! He didn’t die fighting a dragon. He wasn’t fending off some super villain. He didn’t go in some epic explosion. He hung on a cross. Where many common criminals hung before. Where many common criminals hung after. TRUTH: Jesus’ LIFE seem insignificant, but there is no LIFE more eternally important. Because with his death he removed all of your sins. With his blood he removed all of your guilt. With his resurrection he declared heaven to be yours! It might look common. It might seem insignificant. It might seem like a mustard seed of a teaching. But belief in Jesus leads to a mustard plant like growth into the Kingdom of God itself. And.. If Jesus’ LIFE seemed insignificant, but there is no life more eternally important… Jesus WORK might seem insignificant, but there is no WORK more eternally important. That insignificant looking church service, can reinvigorate and replenish your faith in the Savior. That insignificant looking Bible story – can fill your kids with trust in their Savior. That insignificant invite to worship, might be one of a series of calls from God to bring that person to His kingdom. That insignificant looking Sunday School class, could strengthen the faith of a future SS teacher who will continue to multiply God’s kingdom long after your gone. Those insignificant looking drops of water, wash away sin and bring you into God’s eternal kingdom. And… That insignificant looking, off-key acapella worship service in that stuffy, back storage room with only one person in attendance…might strengthen that person’s faith just enough to bring them home to heaven. Like an insignificant looking mustard seed, God’s kingdom grows into the most eternally significant. IV. What Now? 1. Do the Seemingly Insignificant Work on memorizing Scripture. Sing “Jesus Loves Me” with your kids. Bring your kids to worship – even when they don’t want to. Bring yourself to worship – even when it’s not a celebration Sunday. Tell a coworker about Jesus – even if it’s not some incredible doctrinal statement. Do the seemingly insignificant work this week and you will be doing the eternal important work of God’s kingdom. And it’s not just personal… When you’re leaving today, look behind across the parking lot. There’s an incredible new ministry center out there with an incredible ability to Plant the Message of Jesus in the Hearts of North Raleigh. To be fair – it looks SIGNIFICANT. But the work surrounding it – hasn’t always been… Meetings. Paperwork. Phone calls on hold to subcontractors. Emails typed to potential parents. Fixing the little tiny door latch for the cabinet in the janitor’s closet. On its own, the work seemed insignificant. But together… Wow. Keep doing the insignificant when that opens. Greet visitors. Spend an extra minute talking to a parent about their life. Add a dollar to the offering plate. Paint a wall in the Fellowship Hall. Keep praying. Do the Seemingly Insignificant work of God’s kingdom because there is nothing of more eternal significance. 2. Remember the Eternal Significance Segue with me. To something that isn’t a parable. Segue with me. To something that is a glimpse into the future. Segue with me. To the reality of heaven itself – the ultimate goal of God’s kingdom. After this I looked, and there before me was a great multitude that no one could count, from every nation, tribe, people and language, standing before the throne and before the Lamb. They were wearing white robes and were holding palm branches in their hands. And they cried out in a loud voice: “Salvation belongs to our God, who sits on the throne, and to the Lamb.” Then one of the elders asked me, “These in white robes—who are they, and where did they come from?” I answered, “Sir, you know.” And he said, “These are they who have come out of the great tribulation; they have washed their robes and made them white in the blood of the Lamb.” (Revelation 7:9, 10, 13, 14) Look at that multitude. Look at those people. It’s impressive. It’s eternally significant. But. If you look closely enough you might see… There’s that person that you shared that seemingly insignificant Bible verse with. There’s your neighbor that you shared a seemingly insignificant church invitation with. There’s your child that you shared a seemingly insignificant 5-minute Bible story with. You can't say for sure, so we must keep sharing God's Word. It's important! The kingdom of God is like a mustard seed… The work can look insignificant, but there is no work of more eternal significance.
2 Comments
Jackie L Aquino
10/22/2018 06:12:40 pm
Awesome sermon! Loved it! Sure has given me something to think about. I'm sorry I missed it. See you next week. Thank you so much for these uplifting thought provoking words! God Bless!
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