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ClosePaul Weitzel - July 12, 2026
Parable of the Sower
In Mark chapter four, Jesus used the familiar image of a farmer scattering seed to teach one of the most personal truths in all of Scripture. The farmer is Jesus, the seed is the Gospel, and the soil is the human heart. What makes this parable so striking is that as Jesus told it beside a lake, the crowd was literally standing on the very soil He was describing. Hard ground, rocky ground, weed-filled ground, and good ground were all right beneath their feet. The Gospel, Jesus made clear, is available to everyone. He throws seed without prejudice, not waiting for people to clean themselves up or become the right kind of person first. That single word, whoever, appears over ninety times in the New Testament in connection with the Gospel, and it carries the full weight of God's open invitation to every kind of person. Yet the parable does not stop at availability. It also names the forces that work against the Gospel taking root. Worry, the deceitfulness of wealth, the desire for more things, and shallow faith that never goes deep are all identified by Jesus as enemies of lasting spiritual growth. Some people receive the Gospel with initial excitement but fall away the moment trouble arrives. Others are quietly pursuing both Jesus and comfort at the same time, not realizing that the thorns of the world are slowly crowding out any room for the Gospel to grow. Jesus spoke in parables partly as a filter, separating those who were genuinely seeking Him from those who only wanted the benefits He could provide. At its core, the Gospel is not primarily about getting to heaven. It is about getting to Jesus Himself, knowing Him fully, and being changed by that relationship in ways that no one around you can explain apart from God.
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ClosePaul Weitzel - July 12, 2026
Parable of the Sower
In Mark chapter four, Jesus used the familiar image of a farmer scattering seed to teach one of the most personal truths in all of Scripture. The farmer is Jesus, the seed is the Gospel, and the soil is the human heart. What makes this parable so striking is that as Jesus told it beside a lake, the crowd was literally standing on the very soil He was describing. Hard ground, rocky ground, weed-filled ground, and good ground were all right beneath their feet. The Gospel, Jesus made clear, is available to everyone. He throws seed without prejudice, not waiting for people to clean themselves up or become the right kind of person first. That single word, whoever, appears over ninety times in the New Testament in connection with the Gospel, and it carries the full weight of God's open invitation to every kind of person. Yet the parable does not stop at availability. It also names the forces that work against the Gospel taking root. Worry, the deceitfulness of wealth, the desire for more things, and shallow faith that never goes deep are all identified by Jesus as enemies of lasting spiritual growth. Some people receive the Gospel with initial excitement but fall away the moment trouble arrives. Others are quietly pursuing both Jesus and comfort at the same time, not realizing that the thorns of the world are slowly crowding out any room for the Gospel to grow. Jesus spoke in parables partly as a filter, separating those who were genuinely seeking Him from those who only wanted the benefits He could provide. At its core, the Gospel is not primarily about getting to heaven. It is about getting to Jesus Himself, knowing Him fully, and being changed by that relationship in ways that no one around you can explain apart from God.
