Intro
A question I have sometimes pondered is this: “Does preaching do any good?”  
When I look at how many lives are NOT changed based on what I’ve preached, I 
can all-too-easily conclude that sermons are a waste of time.  What do you 
think?

But the real question isn’t what we may think, but what Jesus thinks.  In our 
Gospel reading for today, Jesus says, “That’s not your concern!”  For He says, 
“The Kingdom of God sprouts and grows on its own” (Mark 4:28).  

Main Body
Yes, Jesus in His usual style puts us all in our place, especially this 
preacher who wants to see God’s Kingdom grow in the way he wants to see it 
grow!  That’s because I, like every Christian, also have a sinful nature that 
wants to manage God.  I want God’s Kingdom to sprout and grow in my own way, 
time, and choosing.  But Jesus simply says that God’s kingdom “produces by 
itself.”

So, how does God’s Kingdom sprout and grow?  It happens in its own way.  Jesus 
says: “The Kingdom of God is like a man who scatters seed on the ground.  He 
sleeps and rises night and day, and the seed sprouts and grows, although he 
doesn’t know how.  All by itself the soil produces a crop--first the stalk, 
then the head, and then the full head of grain.” 

Back in Jesus’ day, when it was time to plant, the farmer went out and sowed 
the seed by hand.  He walked through the fields with his seed bag tied around 
his waist, and he would scatter the seed to the wind.  

But before Jesus told the parable in today’s Gospel reading, He told, “The 
Parable of the Sower and the Seed.”  In that parable, Jesus told how His Word 
goes out into the world, and He used seeds and soil to explain it.  The 
scattered seed falls on different soils.  Some fall on hardened earth, where 
the birds come and snatch up the seeds.  Some fall on rocky soil, where the 
seed sprouts, but because the plants have no root, they quickly die.   Some 
fall on the weed-infested ground, which chokes out the germinated seed.  

But also remember there’s another soil, a soil that produces a plentiful crop.  
Jesus talked about what happens when the Word falls on the good ground.  It 
yields a large harvest.  Jesus then gets to today’s parable. 

Jesus said, “The kingdom of God is like a man who scatters seed on the ground.” 
 Did you notice the sower isn’t anxious when it comes to sowing the seed?  He 
doesn’t test the soil.  He doesn’t send off soil samples to some lab, trying to 
find out how receptive the soil will be or its potential yield.  He simply 
takes the seed and scatters it.  He doesn’t even worry about where the seed 
will land. 

The seed is the Word, who is Jesus, the Word made Flesh.  The soil is the 
hearts of people.  Now we get a picture of how God manages His kingdom in the 
world.  He scatters the Word of Christ, not worrying if it lands on productive 
soil, rocks, weeds, or hard pavement.  And then the Word, Jesus, through the 
Holy Spirit, creates faith when and where He wills. 

Imagine a congregation if it took this parable seriously, of how the seed 
grows.  Imagine Shepherd of the Hills Lutheran Church.  If we took this parable 
seriously, we would sow the Word of Christ recklessly, without concern for 
where it lands.  We would tell others of Jesus, not worrying who hears it, if 
they are “ready” to hear it, or how they will respond.  We would simply sow the 
seed of Christ’s Word. 

So, why doesn’t that happen?  One reason is fear.  You and I fear that others 
may reject us and make fun of us.  You fear that you may not know enough.  You 
fear that you may not know how to answer a question someone might have.  So we 
quietly hide in our little Christian corner, skulking in silence.  

Another reason we don’t sow the seed of Jesus is that we doubt Him.  We doubt 
that Jesus will do what He says He will do.  The Apostle Paul and Pastors Silas 
and Timothy wrote: “God chose you as firstfruits to be saved through the 
sanctifying work of the Spirit and belief in the truth.  He called you to this 
through our Gospel, so you might share in the glory of our Lord Jesus Christ” 
(2 Thessalonians 2:13-14).  Notice who is doing the verbs.  God is!  But, based 
on our experience, we doubt that; so, instead, we often act from our unbelief. 

And what happens when you couple fear with unbelief?  You get programs and ways 
of changing Christ’s Church that are designed to make a congregation grow.  But 
here’s where we go wrong.  No program can replace what God tells us to do--to 
sow the seed of the Word!  

I suppose we can have all the best programs in our congregation--and maybe even 
have a sizable response.  But it won’t be God’s doing, but our own.  For the 
seed of the Word sprouts, grows, and produces fruit when it is scattered, when 
Christ is preached, proclaimed, and spoken.  

When the pastor preaches Jesus into the ear and hearts of his listeners, he 
scatters the seed of the Word.  You also scatter the seed when you bring Jesus 
to someone through what you say.  You scatter the seed when you tell someone 
else about the hope that is in you.  You scatter the seed when you point 
someone to baptism, to the Supper of Jesus’ Body and Blood, and to the 
forgiveness of sins.  

So, how does the Word work?  Jesus says it produces all by itself.  “[The 
sower] sleeps and rises night and day, and the seed sprouts and grows, although 
he doesn’t know how.”  You just sow the seed.  The Kingdom produces by itself, 
in God’s own way and time.  Jesus says, “All by itself the soil produces a 
crop--first the stalk, then the head, and then the full head of grain.”

But when we look around, we don’t see the growth we expect.  It looks as if the 
Word of God isn’t changing people’s lives.  To that Jesus says, “That’s not 
your concern.  Don’t let what you see replace your walk of faith.  The Kingdom 
of God will sprout and grow according to my timetable.”  So, what does that 
mean?  It means that we do what God has given us to do--but we leave the 
results to God.  That would be a horrible business model, but it’s the right 
one for Christ’s Church.  

Jesus says, “How can we picture the Kingdom of God, or what parable can we use 
to describe it?  Consider a mustard seed.  When scattered on the ground, it’s 
the smallest of all the seeds on the earth.  Yet when planted, it grows and 
becomes larger than all the garden plants.  It produces such large branches 
that even the birds in the sky can nest in its shade.” 

Who would have thought that after Jesus was executed on the cross that a church 
of 120 people would spread and grow?  Yet, the Church did exactly that!  The 
Church grew as pastors and laypersons both proclaimed Jesus to others in their 
vocations where God had placed them to serve.  Like a mustard seed, the kingdom 
always starts out small.  

So, you tell others of Jesus.  You invite them to Church.  You make sure your 
pastor is sowing the real seed of the Word, not what you may simply want to 
hear.  Yes, the seed is sown, and the Kingdom grows.  You and I sow the 
seed--but the results are in God’s hands!  Again, you and I sow the seed--but 
the results are in God’s hands!

But also know this: For a plant to grow, the seed must die.  For if the seed 
doesn’t die, then a plant won’t grow from the remains of the seed.  In John’s 
Gospel, Jesus said, “I assure you: Unless a grain of wheat falls to the ground 
and dies, it remains alone.  But if it dies, it produces a large crop” (John 
12:24).  Jesus was pointing to His own death.  For He is the promised Seed of 
Abraham, the Seed through whom all nations would be blessed.  He had to die and 
be buried like seed in the ground.  If Jesus hadn’t died, there would be no 
fruit, no forgiveness, no life, and no salvation.  

The seed must die to fulfill its purpose.  You also need to die.  Every day, 
living in your baptism, the implanted Word is to have its way with you.  You 
die to sin and self, so you may rise to new life in Jesus.  Dying and rising 
are the way of the seed; they are the way of Christ and His Kingdom.  You not 
only scatter the seed, you are also a seed that dies to live. 

Conclusion
You and I may ask, “Does it do any good to scatter the seed?”  Jesus answers, 
“Yes, but leave the results to me.”  Your seed bags are full of the good Word 
of Jesus Himself.  So scatter that Word.  Scatter it fearlessly and recklessly. 
 And know the seed will grow and produce a crop in God’s own way and time, all 
by itself, just as it has in you.  Amen. 


 --
Rich Futrell, Pastor
Shepherd of the Hills Lutheran Church, Kimberling City, MO
http://sothl.com 

Where we receive and confess the faith of the Church (in and with the Augsburg 
Confession): The faith once delivered to the saints, the faith of Christ Jesus, 
His Word of the Gospel, His full forgiveness of sins, His flesh and blood given 
and poured out for us, and His gracious gift of life for body, soul, and 
spirit.  

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