Gospel of Matthew

"The Miraculous Mundane" – Matthew 13:31-35

Matthew 13:31-35

He put before them another parable: ‘The kingdom of heaven is like a mustard seed that someone took and sowed in his field; it is the smallest of all the seeds, but when it has grown it is the greatest of shrubs and becomes a tree, so that the birds of the air come and make nests in its branches.’

He told them another parable: ‘The kingdom of heaven is like yeast that a woman took and mixed in with three measures of flour until all of it was leavened.’

Jesus told the crowds all these things in parables; without a parable he told them nothing. This was to fulfill what had been spoken through the prophet:

“I will open my mouth to speak in parables;
    I will proclaim what has been hidden from the foundation of the world.”


In order to put yourself in a better position to understand this parable, I’d like you to imagine you were part of the crowd to whom Jesus was addressing this parable. You, a Jewish man or woman in the first century, have a lot of questions and high expectations for this rabbi who has been wandering around from village to village astounding crowds with his teaching and performing miracles. 

You have been listening to Jesus for a while now and he keeps telling stories – stories about things you encounter on a daily basis. There was the story of the sower who wasted his seeds by scattering them without any care for where they would land and yet still ended up with a miraculous harvest. That story made you think about God differently, imagining God as something that plants seeds of grace in every corner of creation

Next came the story of the weeds and the wheat growing together. What a relief to hear that even though evil and righteousness exist together right now, God is in control of separating them and will do so at the appointed time.

Now Jesus tells two more stories. The first about a mustard seed that grows into a large bush which birds can use for shelter. The second about a woman who hides leaven in three measures of flour and watches as the glob of dough rises.

You know what both of these things are. In fact, they’re so common to you that you probably don’t spend much time thinking about or appreciating them. Those mustard bushes are all over the place. They are quite pretty plants, with those yellow flowers, and you know that its seeds and leaves are used in cooking and medicine. Come to think of it, you have seen birds nesting in these bushes, just as Jesus pointed out. 

And of course you know all about leaven (*what today we would call "sourdough starter"). You have a jar of it in your home. A gelatinous goo with a sour, earthy smell. It’s the key to making bread. Every day you reach in and take a portion of it out, mix in into your flour, and watch the dough rise to three times its original size. You also add more flour to the jar of leaven each day so that it will be ready to be used the next day and will never run out. 

And did Jesus say that leaven was going into three measures of flour? That is an absurd amount of flour. It would make over sixty loaves of bread. That’s enough for a wedding party. And then you remember why that phrase “three measures of flour” sounds familiar. That was the amount of flour Abraham instructed Sarah to use to bake the cakes for the three mysterious visitors who would then announce she would give birth to a son in her old age. You wonder if Jesus meant to make a connection between the kingdom of God, your kitchen, blessing, and new life. 

With that little imaginative exercise I hope you were able to see that the things that Jesus spoke about in his parables were things you would encounter on a daily basis – things that are so common that you might even fail to pay attention to them. Such things are the key to understanding the Kingdom of Heaven. 

In the parables, the leaven and the mustard seed are not really metaphors for more noble truths or difficult concepts; instead, they are reminders to be aware of the miracles of daily existence.

If you are looking for the Kingdom of Heaven, look no further than the parts of God’s creation that you encounter in your daily life. 

The kingdom of heaven is in the fermentation of yeast and the photosynthesis of plants – both are processes of transformation and new life that take place without any work of your part. 

Jesus reveals this truth in the context of a group of religious people who had asked Jesus for a sign to prove he was the Son of God. Rather than do something they would have understood as otherworldly and miraculous, Jesus directs their attention to God’s ongoing activity in the world – in and through things as common and unremarkable as leaven in every home and mustard plants in every garden. 

Jesus points to the God who is incarnate in every natural process and creature in the world, and invites the crows to see every daily encounter and action as a way to experience the God of all creation. 

I took my boys golfing this week – something they wanted to do before the school year started. Upon completing the front nine we had to stop by the clubhouse both for bathroom break; but also so that I could buy more golf balls since we lost quite a few to the various ponds and heavy brush out-of-bounds areas. 

As I was paying for the golf balls, the older man running the register told me, “That’s a special gift you’re giving those boys.” My first thought was that he was talking about the sleeve of the cheap golf balls I was buying. Perhaps sensing my confusion he continued, “I was a great athlete in high school. I set records in wrestling and baseball…and my dad never came to see me play, not even once. He was too busy drinking. I see kids playing golf with their parents here and I just know that’s a special gift. When they get older they’ll spend time with their kids because you did something special for them.”

I thanked the man for his observation – for reminding me of the gift it was to spend time with my children. I don't tell that story to make it look like I'm the hero of this story. The man in the clubhouse is the hero of this story because he is the one who was able to look at something ordinary, something he has seen countless times in his time at the golf course, and call my attention to its sacredness. 

The key to understanding the kingdom of God is to make an effort to notice God’s limitless presence and grace in even the most common and unremarkable things. As with yeast and tiny mustard seeds, these common everyday things are packed with kingdom potential.

The Christ-follower’s call is to go around calling attention to the grace inherent in common and unremarkable things, responsibilities, and people. 

Amen.

"The Whole Truth of Easter"

Matthew 28:1-10

After the Sabbath, when the first day of the week was dawning, Mary Magdalene and the other Mary went to see the tomb. Suddenly there was a great earthquake because an angel of the Lord, descending from heaven, came and rolled back the stone from the entrance of the tomb and sat on it. His appearance was like lightning and his clothing white as snow. For fear of him, the guards shook and became like dead men.

But the angel said to the women, “Do not be afraid. I know you are looking for Jesus who was crucified. He’s not here, he has been raised, as he said. Come and see the place where he lay, then go and tell his disciples, ‘He has been raised from the dead and he is going ahead of you to Galilee, there you will see him.’ This is my message for you.”

So the women left the tomb quickly with fear and great joy to tell his disciples. On the way, Jesus met them and said, “Greetings.” They came to him, took hold of his feet, and worshiped him. Then he said to them, “Do not be afraid, but go and tell my disciples to go to Galilee. There they will see me.”


It’s always good to smile on Easter, so I thought we should start with something worth a laugh that the kids might get a kick out of, too. This little video is a portion of something that YouTube calls “Incredible Moments When Dads Save the Day.”  (We didn't watch the whole thing Sunday morning, but...)

You can tell they are dads, mostly by the mothers gasping and laughing in the background. And in one of the clips I edited out for the sake of time, the dad had my dad’s uniform on – white socks and sandals. But none of that is really the point.

Seeing that little video of “incredible moments when Dads saved the day” made me realize how we can sometimes simplify the Good News of Easter to such a degree that we may only be hearing and sharing a portion of what Easter’s good news is really all about; we may only be getting “half” of the Truth, if you will, which wasn’t part of my plan, but fits pretty well with the “Half-Truths” sermon series we spent so much time with during Lent around here the last few weeks.

What I mean is, we focus a lot – if not all – of our time and energy and Easter theology on the notion that, in Jesus Christ, God the Father, saves us, like some kind of Super Dad, from the death and damnation that our sins would otherwise demand. One of my favorite hymns of all sings, “my sin, not in part, but the whole was nailed to his cross and I bear it no more, praise the Lord, praise the Lord, oh my soul.”

So don’t get me wrong – that is the Gospel’s good news and it is True with a capital T. But it is also only part of what makes Good Friday’s sadness and Easter’s joy True, with a capital T.

What I mean is, Jesus didn’t die on the cross just so we wouldn’t have to. We’re all going to die after all, and for many of us, it may not include a cross, but it still won’t be pretty or painless. And Jesus didn’t die on the cross just because God knew the likes of you and I wouldn’t have the faith or the courage to climb up there, ourselves.

And Jesus didn’t die on the cross because, in the cosmic math of how much suffering had to be endured in order to atone for the sins of all humanity, Jesus’ death – by way of whips and thorns and spit and nails – was the only thing that would measure up. Jesus’ dying wasn’t just a tit-for-tat kind of transaction that would balance the scales of our sinfulness.

Yes, the Lamb of God in Jesus Christ takes away the sin of the world. But there’s more. And the more comes on Easter morning. On Easter we get the rest of the story; the Full Monty; the Truth, the whole Truth and nothing but the Truth.

Jesus didn’t just come to die to save us from our sins. Jesus was raised, too, to show us what real living looks like. Jesus didn’t just die to save us. Jesus lived to show us a better way. God, in Jesus Christ showed up to let the world see that the ways of God – peace, humility, sacrifice, generosity, obedience, grace, mercy, love – always, always, always win.

And that’s the kind of Easter news we need as much as ever in the world these days…

Whether there was good reason or need for it, or not, our country just dropped what is celebrated as the Mother Of All Bombs – the largest non-nuclear weapon ever engaged in the history of wars. Three days after Good Friday, on the other side of the empty tomb, we are reminded – in spite of ourselves – that violence is not the way to God’s kind of victory in this world.

We live in a world that convinces us we need to have more and get more and keep more – that more money and things and stuff are the way to greater security; that our identity is wrapped up in the value of what we have. Three days after Good Friday, on the other side of the empty tomb, we are reminded that Judas and his 30 pieces of silver lost it all in the end.

We live in a culture that glorifies independence and self-reliance and the virtue of “picking yourself up by your own bootstraps” to such a degree that we pretend we’ve earned or deserve all that is ours. Even more, we’ve convinced ourselves and others that if you have less than you are less and that you just don’t deserve it until you’ve earned it. Three days after Good Friday, on the other side of the empty tomb, we are reminded that humbled by God’s grace and that humility trumps pride, every time.

God’s Church in the world still fights and bickers and pretends it can draw lines around and put up barriers against and administrate who’s “in” and whose “out” as far God’s children are concerned. Three days after Good Friday, on the other side of the empty tomb, we are reminded that God did not send the Son into the world to condemn the world, but in order that the WORLD – the whole wide world and all that is in it – would be saved through him.

We have had our share of dying already this year around here – at Cross of Grace and in our community – and it saddens me to imagine that the year’s not over. But three days after Good Friday, on the other side of the empty tomb, we are reminded that the ways of life as believers – things like faith, hope, and love, I mean – have sustained us in the face of it, and will continue to in the days to come.

Jesus’ resurrection is a slap in the face to the ways of sin and darkness; it’s a reality check about what matters and what works and what wins as far as our God is concerned. Jesus was raised so we would know what real humility, true strength, legitimate power, and amazing grace look like – and that they triumph over the ways of sin, death, greed, fear and despair whenever we have courage, faith and love enough to put them to work in our lives, for the sake of the world.

So I like the Dad videos, because what parent doesn’t want to put on a cape and save their kids from a scraped knee or a broken bone or from even more if/when we might have to? But the other side of parenthood – the harder work of loving children – the faithful work of loving one another like God does – is the daily, obedient willingness to love one another in spite of what’s broken; to sacrifice when we’re not sure we have any more to give; to bear burdens that seem like more than we can carry on our own; to offer comfort, hope and peace in the face of so much to the contrary. In other words, to follow in the ways of Jesus and to do it trusting that the ways of God will win the day every time.

And that’s the Truth, the whole Truth and nothing but the Truth of Easter’s good news. Forgiveness of sins yes. But even more: amazing love, so great it conquers even sin and death, and inspires us to live and to love differently and in bold, surprising, hopeful ways, ourselves – like Jesus did – for us and for the sake of the world.

Amen. Alleluia. Happy Easter.