24 Jesus told them another parable: “The kingdom of heaven is like a man who sowed good seed in his field. 25 But while everyone was sleeping, his enemy came and sowed weeds among the wheat, and went away. 26 When the wheat sprouted and formed heads, then the weeds also appeared. 27 “The owner’s servants came to him and said, ‘Sir, didn’t you sow good seed in your field? Where then did the weeds come from?’ 28 “‘An enemy did this,’ he replied. “The servants asked him, ‘Do you want us to go and pull them up?’ 29 “‘No,’ he answered, ‘because while you are pulling the weeds, you may uproot the wheat with them. 30 Let both grow together until the harvest. At that time I will tell the harvesters: First collect the weeds and tie them in bundles to be burned; then gather the wheat and bring it into my barn.’” 36 Then he left the crowd and went into the house. His disciples came to him and said, “Explain to us the parable of the weeds in the field.” 37 He answered, “The one who sowed the good seed is the Son of Man. 38 The field is the world, and the good seed stands for the people of the kingdom. The weeds are the people of the evil one, 39 and the enemy who sows them is the devil. The harvest is the end of the age, and the harvesters are angels. 40 “As the weeds are pulled up and burned in the fire, so it will be at the end of the age. 41 The Son of Man will send out his angels, and they will weed out of his kingdom everything that causes sin and all who do evil. 42 They will throw them into the blazing furnace, where there will be weeping and gnashing of teeth. 43 Then the righteous will shine like the sun in the kingdom of their Father. Whoever has ears, let them hear. (Matthew 13:24-30, 36-43 NIV)
A wonderful Monday to you, dear Friend! May the joy of the Lord be your strength today and all days. May this time spent in prayer, thought, reflection and planning serve to make us stronger in our walk with Jesus.
Many of us have lived near ranches and farms, or driven by them. This has always fascinated me as a regular commute by a field always shows the hard work a farmer puts in to the awesome transformation that occurs in that field. And this parable of Jesus shows how too Jesus was aware and blessed by the work of farmers, actually sowers that did the planting.
Jesus tells this parable with an economy of detail that makes it land harder, not softer. A man sows good seed in his field. While everyone sleeps, an enemy comes and sows weeds among the wheat, then disappears into the night. When the grain comes up and begins to head out, the weeds appear alongside it, and the workers come to the farmer with the obvious question: didn't you sow good seed? Where did all this come from? "An enemy did this," the farmer says. Simple. Direct. No hand-wringing, no theological crisis. The enemy is real, the damage is real, and the farmer knows exactly what he's looking at.
What's striking is what he doesn't do. The workers are ready to pull the weeds out immediately — which is the instinctive human response to anything that looks wrong and out of place. Root it out. Deal with it now. Clean the field up and get back to the business of growing wheat. But the farmer says no. Not yet. "Let both grow together until the harvest". His reason is practical and profound: the roots of the wheat and the weeds are so entangled at this stage that pulling the weeds would damage the wheat. The removal will come, but it will happen at the right time, by the right hands, with the right tools. Not before.
When the disciples ask Jesus to explain the parable privately, He draws back the curtain further than any of them probably expected. The field is the world. The good seed are the sons of the kingdom. The weeds are the sons of the evil one. The enemy who sowed them is the devil himself. And the harvest is the end of the age, when the angels will be the reapers. Jesus is not describing a tidily sorted world in which the righteous and the wicked occupy separate fields with a clear fence between them. He is describing the world as it actually is — mixed, entangled, not yet separated, not yet fully revealed for what it is — and He is telling His disciples that this is the condition they will be living and working in for the entirety of the present age.
This should do something to the way we hold our frustration with the state of the world. We live in a time when the question the workers ask seems to rise from every direction: didn't God sow good seed here? Where did all this evil come from? Why does it seem to grow so abundantly alongside everything that is good and true? The parable doesn't tell us to stop asking the question. It tells us that the farmer already knows the answer, has already identified the enemy, and is already working toward a harvest that will settle everything with a precision and a thoroughness that no human hands could achieve in the meantime. The righteous will shine like the sun in the kingdom of their Father, Jesus says — not a dim glow, not a moderate improvement over their present condition, but like the sun. The harvest will be worth the waiting.
The Pentecost connection runs quietly through the whole of this parable. The disciples who first heard it were living in exactly the entangled, not-yet-separated world Jesus described, and they would spend their lives as wheat growing alongside weeds, sometimes indistinguishable from the outside, sometimes under pressure that made it hard to hold their form. The Spirit poured out at Pentecost did not separate the field prematurely. He didn't pull the weeds for the disciples. What He did was equip the wheat to be unmistakably wheat — to grow with a vitality and a fruitfulness that the weeds could never produce, to hold their shape under pressure, to bear fruit in the kind of soil that the enemy had done his best to compromise. The Spirit is still doing that work. In a world that looks exactly as complicated and entangled as the field Jesus describes, the Spirit's work in the believer is to make them so thoroughly themselves — so shaped by the life of Christ — that the harvest, when it comes, will find something worth gathering.
There is also a mercy in the farmer's restraint that we should not miss. The waiting is not indifference. It is the patience of a God who, as Peter would later write, does not want anyone to perish but everyone to come to repentance. The harvest is certain. The angels are ready. The separation will be total and final and irreversible. But in the meantime, the field remains open, which means the call of the gospel is still going out, which means there are people who are right now weeds who will become wheat before the harvest if the patience of the farmer holds — and it will hold, because this is a farmer who sent His own Son to make that transformation possible.
PRAYER: Lord, grow us into unmistakable wheat by Your Spirit, make us fruitful in the field where You have placed us, and give us the patience to trust Your timing for the harvest. This we pray in Christ Jesus' strong name, amen.
Have a great and blessed day in the Lord! OUR CALL TO ACTION: Ask the Holy Spirit today to show you one way He wants to make you more unmistakably wheat in the particular field — neighborhood, workplace, family — where He has planted you.
I love you and I thank God for you! You matter to God and you matter to me!
Pastor Eradio Valverde, Jr.






