Title: The Parable of the Sower
1Lesson 6 The Parable of the Sower
2The Parable of the SowerThe Narrative
Mt. 133-8, 18-23 Mk. 43-8, 14-20 Lk. 85-8,
11-15
- The Sower
- The sower went forth to sow, as was common in
those days - Initially, the sower represented Christ, who went
out teaching and sowing the Word. - In application and principle, it is the
responsibility of every Christian to be the
sower, sowing the seed of the kingdom (cf. Acts
84).
3The Parable of the SowerThe Narrative
Mt. 133-8, 18-23 Mk. 43-8, 14-20 Lk. 85-8,
11-15
- The Sower
- Some Truths for the Sower
- He must sow the seed and leave the increase to
God (Isa. 5510-11 1 Cor. 36). - He must sow at all times, not waiting until
everything is favorable (Ecc. 114-6 2 Tim.
42). - He must sow, realizing that others may reap the
harvest (John 435-38). - He must sow on all kinds of soil (Matt. 133-8).
- He must sow with the right attitude (2 Tim.
224-28 Eph. 415). - He must believe in the seed he sows (Rom. 116).
4The Parable of the SowerThe Narrative
Mt. 133-8, 18-23 Mk. 43-8, 14-20 Lk. 85-8,
11-15
- The Seed
- The seed was dispersed by the sower.
- The seed is the Word of God (Luke 811).
- The seed, representing the Word of God, is that
which contains life (John 663 1 Peter 123). - The seed always produces after its kind (Gen.
111 Gal. 67). - The seed produced Christians only in the first
century and will produce the same today. - The seed can be mixed (Mt. 1324-25 Ga. 16-9).
5The Parable of the SowerThe Narrative
Mt. 133-8, 18-23 Mk. 43-8, 14-20 Lk. 85-8,
11-15
- The Soils
- The soils denote the various sorts of attitudes
that men have towards the gospel. - The success of the sowing depends upon the soils
into which the seed falls. - Hearts must be prepared to seek and receive the
Word (2 Chron. 193 3019 Ezra 710).
6The Parable of the SowerThe Narrative
Mt. 133-8, 18-23 Mk. 43-8, 14-20 Lk. 85-8,
11-15
- The SoilsThe Wayside Soil
- (Matt. 133-4, 19 Mark 415 Luke 85, 12)
- Hard path that is fertile, but packed unplowed
- The seed makes contact, but because the soil is
so hard, it cannot penetrate. - The wayside soil represents
- One who does not believe, because (Luke 812)
- He has chosen not to understand, because
- His heart has been hardened to the truth,
because - He is not interested in the gospel (Matt. 1319)
7The Parable of the SowerThe Narrative
Mt. 133-8, 18-23 Mk. 43-8, 14-20 Lk. 85-8,
11-15
- The SoilsThe Wayside Soil
- (Matt. 133-4, 19 Mark 415 Luke 85, 12)
- The birds symbolize Satan (Matt. 1319)
- Satan comes immediately (Mark 415) and snatches
the seed away (Matt. 1319) - Satan only takes the seed after the soil has
rejected it - Satan is ever happy to cooperate with those who
reject the truth (John 1327 Matt. 274 Acts
53-4) - If the Word dwelt in the heart long enough for
faith to result, salvation could follow (Luke
812). - What methods does he use to snatch the Word away?
8The Parable of the SowerThe Narrative
Mt. 133-8, 18-23 Mk. 43-8, 14-20 Lk. 85-8,
11-15
- The SoilsThe Wayside Soil
- (Matt. 133-4, 19 Mark 415 Luke 85, 12)
- What are some reasons hearts are hardened?
- Pride (cf. Prov. 1618)
- Prejudice, come with idol in heart (cf. Ezek.
141-5) - Fear of giving up things (cf. Luke 1818ff)
- Worldliness (cf. Eph. 417-18)
- No love for truth (cf. 2 Thess. 210)
- Continually resisting the truth (cf. Ex. 819-20)
- Habitually practicing sin (cf. Heb. 313)
9The Parable of the SowerThe Narrative
Mt. 133-8, 18-23 Mk. 43-8, 14-20 Lk. 85-8,
11-15
- The SoilsThe Wayside Soil
- (Matt. 133-4, 19 Mark 415 Luke 85, 12)
- Do you know any wayside soils?
- Hear the Word with their minds already made up
(cf. Acts 1721) - Hear but think the truth applies to someone else
(cf. John 833) - Hear but go out and live as they did before (cf.
Jas. 122-25) - Hear but have allowed the world to trample hearts
so long that they are untouched (cf. 1 Tim. 41-2)
10The Parable of the SowerThe Narrative
Mt. 133-8, 18-23 Mk. 43-8, 14-20 Lk. 85-8,
11-15
- The SoilsThe Stony/Rocky Soil
- (Matt. 135-6, 20-21 Mark 416-17 Luke 86, 13)
- A thin layer of soil overlying a solid ledge of
rock fertility is not the problem, depth is - Plants spring up immediately (b/c lacks depth)
- The stony/rocky soil represents
- One who lacks any strong convictions /
earnestness - One who is an emotional, superficial, impulsive
hearer - One, possibly, who is won to Christ on basis of
frills - One who sees only pleasant elements of
Christianity - One who does not count the cost (Lk. 1425ff
923)
11The Parable of the SowerThe Narrative
Mt. 133-8, 18-23 Mk. 43-8, 14-20 Lk. 85-8,
11-15
- The SoilsThe Stony/Rocky Soil
- (Matt. 135-6, 20-21 Mark 416-17 Luke 86, 13)
- The seed has no depth, therefore no root, without
which no plant can survive Christians must be
rooted in Christ (Col. 27 Eph. 317) - One cannot afford for his faith to be shallow.
- Faith must grow inward (and deeply) and not be
merely outward.
12The Parable of the SowerThe Narrative
Mt. 133-8, 18-23 Mk. 43-8, 14-20 Lk. 85-8,
11-15
- The SoilsThe Stony/Rocky Soil
- (Matt. 135-6, 20-21 Mark 416-17 Luke 86, 13)
- Thus, when the sun was risen (tribulation and
persecution arose because of the Word), the
shallow soul folks immediately fell away - Those who respond to the Lord impulsively are
prone to quickly fall. - The sun (tribulations/persecutions) destroys the
shallow-rooted person, but makes stronger the
deeply rooted Christian (cf. James 12-4). - Though these believed for a while (Luke 813),
they fell away. A child of God can fall away and
be lost.
13The Parable of the SowerThe Narrative
Mt. 133-8, 18-23 Mk. 43-8, 14-20 Lk. 85-8,
11-15
- The SoilsThe Stony/Rocky Soil
- (Matt. 135-6, 20-21 Mark 416-17 Luke 86, 13)
- Do you know any stony soils?
- Hears the Word, obeys the Word quickly, and then
falls away. - Have emotions stirred and make sudden impulse
decision. - Obey without counting the cost commitment
involved and all one must endure. - Some people are easily excited, always starting
projects but never completing them. Sometimes
describes some Christians.
14The Parable of the SowerThe Narrative
Mt. 133-8, 18-23 Mk. 43-8, 14-20 Lk. 85-8,
11-15
- The SoilsThe Thorny Soil
- (Matt. 137, 22 Mark 47, 18-19 Luke 814)
- The soil is fit/fertile, but its crowded.
- The seeds of the thorns were already in the
ground, implying inadequate preparation. - The thorny soil represents
- The pre-occupied hearer
- A divided heart with divided loyalties (cf. Matt.
624) - One who is so busy with other things he cannot be
busy for Christ
15The Parable of the SowerThe Narrative
Mt. 133-8, 18-23 Mk. 43-8, 14-20 Lk. 85-8,
11-15
- The SoilsThe Thorny Soil
- (Matt. 137, 22 Mark 47, 18-19 Luke 814)
- Thorns The cares of this world (Mt. 1322)
- These are the distracting anxieties/worries of
this life - Day-to-day worries about living can distract
(Prov. 308-9 Matt. 625-34). - Worry and anxiety in the example of Martha choked
out the good part (Luke 1038-42). - Sometimes we allow the lesser important to choke
out the most important (Luke 2134-35).
16The Parable of the SowerThe Narrative
Mt. 133-8, 18-23 Mk. 43-8, 14-20 Lk. 85-8,
11-15
- The SoilsThe Thorny Soil
- (Matt. 137, 22 Mark 47, 18-19 Luke 814)
- Thorns The deceitfulness of riches (Matt. 1322)
- Riches promise happiness but they do not and
cannot deliver (Ecc. 510-13). - Preoccupation with wealth leads to other problems
as well (1 Tim. 69-10). - If materialism was a curse upon the church in the
first century for Jesus to present a lesson on
thorns, how much more is it a curse on the church
today?
17The Parable of the SowerThe Narrative
Mt. 133-8, 18-23 Mk. 43-8, 14-20 Lk. 85-8,
11-15
- The SoilsThe Thorny Soil
- (Matt. 137, 22 Mark 47, 18-19 Luke 814)
- Thorns The desire for other things (Mark 419)
- There are many things in our lives that can (and
often do) take precedence over Christ family,
educational pursuits, desire for popularity,
career goals, etc. - Even things that are not intrinsically wrong must
take a second place to the Lord (Matt. 633).
18The Parable of the SowerThe Narrative
Mt. 133-8, 18-23 Mk. 43-8, 14-20 Lk. 85-8,
11-15
- The SoilsThe Thorny Soil
- (Matt. 137, 22 Mark 47, 18-19 Luke 814)
- Thorns The pleasures of this life (Luke 814)
- Christianity does not take the joy out of life,
but it does demand that we put first things
first. - Earthly pleasures cannot produce true happiness
(Ecc. 2). - Hobbies, recreation, our down time, etc., are
first with too many today (cf. 1 Tim. 48). - Again, some of these things may not be wrong in
and of themselves, but placed foremost in our
lives will leave no room for God and His Word. - Those pleasures that are sinful most be
avoided!!!