The Kingdom of God Grows Slowly

Bible Study series: Mark 4:26-29. The kingdom of God is not fireworks, but grows little by little, often unnoticed except by the farmer who plants the seeds.

I write to learn; let’s learn together. I also translate to learn. The translations are mine, unless otherwise noted. If you would like to see many others, please click on this link:

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If you would like to see the original Greek, please click here:

Mark 4

At that link, I also offer more commentary and a Summary and Conclusion, geared towards discipleship. Scroll down to the bottom and check it out!

Let’s begin.

Scripture: Mark 4:26-29

26 And he said, “In this way the kingdom of God is like a man who casts seed on the ground 27 and then sleeps and arises night and day, and the seed sprouts and gets taller and he does not know how. 28 On its own, the soil produces crops, first a blade of grass, then a head of grain, then a full crop in the head. 29 When the crop is ripe, he sends in the sickle because the harvest is fully grown.” (Mark 4:26-29)

26-29:

What Is a Parable?

Let’s take this parable as a whole.

It is about a limited perspective and trust. The farmer does not know the science behind the soil producing the crop. He follows the rhythms of nature—or the kingdom of God. He does his part: he casts or sows the seed on the soil. From what we learned from vv. 13-20, the seed is the word of the kingdom and the good news. He preaches. Then he patiently waits for nature—the kingdom—to do its thing on its own. He does not need to stand out in the field anxiously calling forth the seed with his hands raised. “Crop, come forth!” The kingdom does it for him. He can rest and do his other chores. He sleeps by night and works by day, waiting patiently for the seed to grow by the kingdom’s power.

Another element is the gradual growth. First the seed (word) sprouts; then a blade of wheat grass gets taller. He does not know how. The wheat stalk gets taller and taller and then the grains of wheat appear on the top. Finally, the head of grains bends down from the weight. The harvest is ready, so he sends in the sickle and the harvest can begin. He understands how to harvest. He now has to work. But God gave the increase.

As I understand this parable, the kingdom of God endorses and empowers the word of God when the preacher proclaims it. He does not strive or struggle but relaxes or rests when he proclaims it. The kingdom does the work behind the scenes, out of view, and in him and through him.

Application: preachers don’t need to strive so much and work so hard on the platform. They don’t need to shriek and freak and dance and prance and yell and sell the gospel. Just talk. Yes, get animated once in a while, but the excitement does not need to be gingered up and on a perpetually high volume.

Talking fast and loud ≠ the anointing.

What Is the ‘Anointing’?

Preachers have the Spirit of God in them. Let him do all the work.

Wessel and Strauss point to Joel 2:12-13 and say that this short parable speaks of judgment at the end of the age. True. I also believe that the parable relates to the present age and the work of the kingdom.

France writes of the main point:

The kingdom of God, then, does not depend on human effort to achieve it, and human insight will not be able to explain it. This aspect of the parable, focused in the farmer’s inactivity, could suggest a quietistic theology which allows disciples to disclaim any responsibility in the establishment of God’s kingdom. … But if the focus is on the dynamic of the kingdom of God, the farmer’s inactivity functions merely as a foil to this main theme. Here, unlike the parable of the sower, the structure of the story does not suggest a multiple purpose which would require this subsidiary aspect of the imagery to be given a message of its own. …

The first parable, then, is a message about rightly interpreting and responding to the period of the apparent inaction of the kingdom of God. Despite appearances to the contrary, it is growing, and the harvest will come. But it will come in God’s time and in God’s way, and humans have to step up and advance the kingdom, but nothing is accomplished by human effort alone or in accordance with human logic alone.

GrowApp for Mark 4:26-29

1. Do you trust God to let the word of God grow by his power (not yours)? How has the word grown in your life when you first heard it?

2. How have you seen the word grow in someone else’s life?

RELATED

10. Eyewitness Testimony in Mark’s Gospel

2. Church Fathers and Mark’s Gospel

2. Archaeology and the Synoptic Gospels

14. Similarities among John’s Gospel and the Synoptic Gospels

1. The Historical Reliability of the Gospels: Introduction to Series

SOURCES

For bibliographical data, please click on this link and scroll down to the very bottom:

Mark 4

 

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