Wednesday, June 14, 2006

In John 12:24 Jesus said, "I tell you the truth, unless a kernel of wheat falls to the ground and dies, it remains only a single seed. But if it dies, it produces many seeds." A seed alone is hard and generally small. To simply look at it, one might not see the power that is within the hard exterior shell. However, that power can only be tapped into when the seed is placed in the ground and is allowed to soften and literally rot. The soil is watered and in that soft, moist soil the seed dies so that something else can live. A new and beautiful plant developes from the interior of the seed and from that plant many seeds or fruit are produced. However, that production or reproduction is only possible when the seed dies. There are mutiple applications that come out of this picture that Jesus painted for us. The first of two applications that I would like to share is the seed being in the hand of the sower. Seeds are meant to be planted. They were never meant to remain in the hand of the sower or in a packet that is never opened and used. The cottonwood tree comes to mind when I think of this truth. The tree produces it seed pods which when the time is right pop open and the seeds are released to be blown by the wind wherever it pleases. The tree does not have a choice whether to release the seeds or not but it simply happens because that is the way the creator designed it. God designed the Gospel to be a seed for sowing. It it sown through our words and deeds and with the Spirits power, like the wind in the cottonwood, it is taken and planted where it needs to be planted. There the seed produces new and abundant life. However, we must be willing to sow the seed as the Lord intended for us to do and realize that it is the Lord who causes the growth. The second application that I believe we can find in this passage is that we are the seed. We must be willing to die and be used by the sower to produce fruit. God himself is the planter and decides when and where to plant. The seed cannot decide that it does not want to be planted, so why do we so often tell God no when He desires to plant us in a specific soil. If we realize that we are in the hand of God and are willing to be planted, and die, then God can use us to grow his Kingdom. In dying, the hard and inpenetrable shell of our lives falls away and the soft inside is exposed for God to use as he wills. May he help us to give up our lives by being willing to sow and be sown for His glorification and for the enlargement of his Kingdom.

3 comments:

Anthony Parker said...

Thanks for a great post. We also were glad to see the picture of your new house. Hope you are enjoying the States. We are, but it's definitely not furlough. Maureen and I are in Dallas right now; hope to see the Rieses this weekend.
Blessings,
Anthony

Sarah said...

Dave,
I love the word picture of the Spirit being the wind that blows the message of the gospel (like a seed) to be planted where God wants it to be planted.
Sarah

Patty said...

I wanted to say I appreciated the direction you're going with you Sunday a.m. class. The question of "lost and found" is indeed important. There seemed to be a lot of discussion of people not feeling very lost, but I think a lot of the reason we don't readily share the good news is that we don't feel very "found". I have met so many people who still wallow in the gray area of "I'm thankful for Jesus and his grace and I sure hope I did everything right so it will work on me."

Blessings on you and your growing family.