“He Had One Left to Send, a Son”

March 29, 2024

March 29, 2024

Read Numbers 18, Psalm 88, Mark 12

What’s your most prized possession that you own? Would it be something expensive and special? Would it be something extremely ordinary but hold a significant meaning to you? Maybe it’s a new car, a valuable piece of jewelry, or a Bible or book that was given to you by someone special. Whatever you are thinking about, now imagine giving that up and giving it to someone else. Not only for them to borrow but for them to mistreat, abuse, or even destroy it. Would you still want to loan it to them? Probably not, but that is what God did when He sent his Son to come to earth, to suffer and die on the cross for our sins. The people rejected Jesus, they took him and murdered him, and they tried to take what was His.

In Mark 12 Jesus tells the parable of the tenants. “He then began to speak to them in parables: “A man planted a vineyard. He put a wall around it, dug a pit for the winepress and built a watchtower. Then he rented the vineyard to some farmers and went away on a journey” v. 1.  The owner of the vineyard sent some servants to the vineyard to collect some of the fruit, but the tenants killed the servants that the owner sent. These tenants represented the religious leaders of Jesus day, and the servants were the prophets from the Old Testament. Last of all the owner sends his own son. The owner remarks, “They will respect my son” v. 6. The comparison of the son is with that of Jesus. In this parable Jesus is showing that He knew what they would ultimately do to him, they would crucify Jesus as God’s Son. The final verse tells the interpretation, “Then they looked for a way to arrest him because they knew he had spoken the parable against them” v. 12.

What else do you see in these chapters? What stories, verses or elements stand out to you?
Add your thoughts below.


“Lessons from Seeds”

March 21, 2024

March 21, 2024

Read Numbers 10, Psalm 80, Mark 4

Soon it will be time for people to start planning and planting their gardens for the year. If you have ever done that before you know that there is a lot of time and effort that goes into sowing and reaping. Do you have a favorite fruit or vegetable from the garden? I love the smell and taste of fresh tomatoes from the garden. In Mark chapter 4 we have a few lessons that use the imagery of a seed for Jesus to get his point across.

The first parable is the parable of the seeds. Four distinct seeds that are sown have four very different results. Jesus explains this parable to his disciples so we are not left wondering what the meaning might be. Jesus plainly explains, “The farmer sows the word” v. 14. The word of God is sown into the lives of many people but the results may vary based on the conditions in which it was sown. Some seed is sown on the hard path and it doesn’t take root. “Some people are like seed along the path, where the word is sown. As soon as they hear it, Satan comes and takes away the word that was sown in them” v. 15. Still other seeds are sown on some rocks. Jesus said it had no roots either. “When trouble or persecution comes because of the word, they quickly fall away.” How many people at the first sign of trouble or hardship want to bail from their faith and give in when they feel like it’s not the way they expect it to be. The next seed is thrown among thorns. “Still others, like seed sown among thorns, hear the word; 19 but the worries of this life, the deceitfulness of wealth and the desires for other things come in and choke the word, making it unfruitful” vv. 18-19. What types of worries do we allow to take us away from our trust in God? Only the seeds sown in the “good soil” are the ones that take root, grow, and continue to produce a crop. How can you till the soil around the lives of others so that when you sow the seeds of the Word of God they will grow, take root, and in the end produce a crop?

The next parable that uses a seed is called the “growing seed.” Seeds are planted and mysteriously they grow day and night. If we take the seeds to be the word of God again it produces growth. This growth could symbolize spiritual growth in Christians or illustrate the divine sovereignty of God in how He works in the lives of His people. It is possible to see how we must be patient and trust the Lord to work in our lives or the lives of others too. In the end, the harvest comes. This often symbolizes judgment and when the time is right God will reap the seeds He has sown.

The final seed illustration in Mark 4 is the parable of the mustard seed. Critics often use this very to cry foul at the Bible and say it’s wrong. “It is like a mustard seed, which is the smallest seed you plant in the ground” v. 31.  The next sentence says, “Yet when planted, it grows and becomes the largest of all garden plants” v. 32. It’s often said the mustard seed is not the tallest tree, which is true, but we have to read carefully and in the context of when and where this was written. The key is “garden” variety trees. Also, one must keep in mind this was written to a first century audience in Palestine and not to someone viewing the great forests in northern California. Jesus used the mustard seed to show how just a small amount of faith can grow into something much bigger.

What seed parable grabs your attention most? What other seed parables do you know from the Bible?
What else do you read in these three chapters? What words, phrases, or themes stand out to you?
Add your thoughts below.