The Parable of the Wheat and
the Tares
Introduction
Open to Matthew 13. Jesus’ parables train our eyes to see the
kingdom’s reality while we still live in a mixed field. News cycles,
advertising, and public morals often blur the line between what is
wholesome and what is corrupt. Jesus does not leave us guessing. He
hands us a field picture—seed, soil, an enemy, and a harvest—so we
can live wisely and patiently until the final sorting.
The Parable Read (Matthew
13:24–30)
A householder sows good seed in his own field. While men sleep, an
enemy moves through the rows and scatters look-alike weeds among the
young wheat. As the stalks head out, the problem becomes visible.
Servants offer to pull the weeds. The master forbids the rush to
uproot, since roots intertwine. He commands both to grow together
until harvest; then reapers will bind the tares for burning and
gather the wheat into his barn.
Jesus’ Own Explanation
(Matthew 13:36–43)
Jesus identifies every element. The Sower is the Son of Man. The
field is the world. The good seed are the sons of the kingdom. The
tares are the sons of the evil one. The enemy is the devil. The
harvest is the end of the age. The reapers are angels. At the end,
the Son of Man will send forth His angels to remove out of His
kingdom all causes of stumbling and those who practice lawlessness,
casting them into the furnace of fire. Then the righteous will shine
like the sun in the kingdom of their Father. He who has ears, let
him hear.
What Wheat and Tares Teach Us
Jesus’ audience knew a common weed called darnel—so like wheat in
its early growth that farmers often could not distinguish the two
until the head formed. That likeness makes the lesson plain. Within
the realm where Christ exercises rule, genuine disciples grow beside
those who disregard His authority. The resemblance can be convincing
at first glance, yet the fruit reveals the plant.
Why God Allows Coexistence
for a Season
The Master’s command to let both grow safeguards the wheat. Pulling
too soon damages tender roots. God’s patience serves the growth of
His people (2 Peter 3:9). He guards young faith, grants time for
deeper rooting, and will bring an exact harvest when His wisdom
appoints the day (Matthew 13:40).
Discipline Among God’s People
Still Matters
The parable speaks of the world-field and the final harvest.
Congregational life also requires holiness and restorative
discipline. Jesus instructs His church to pursue an erring brother,
step by step, for his restoration (Matthew 18:15–17). Paul directed
churches to remove open, unrepentant sin for the purity and
salvation of souls (1 Corinthians 5; 2 Thessalonians 3:6, 14–15).
Patience toward the world’s mixture goes hand in hand with obedience
to these passages inside the fellowship.
The Kingdom: Present and
Awaiting Consummation
The Son of Man gathers out of “His kingdom” at the end (Matthew
13:41), which shows His reign operates now (Colossians 1:13;
Revelation 1:9). When He comes, He will hand the finished kingdom to
the Father (1 Corinthians 15:24–26). The kingdom therefore stands as
a present reality that will be openly manifested in glory.
A Solemn Warning Against
Lawlessness
Some stand within the realm of Christ’s rule and still practice
lawlessness. Jesus describes many who will point to impressive
religious activity yet lacked submission to the Father’s will
(Matthew 7:21–23). John says abiding in the doctrine of Christ keeps
one in fellowship with the Father and the Son (2 John 9). Paul gives
the safeguard: whatever you do, in word or deed, do all in the name
of the Lord Jesus (Colossians 3:17). These warnings protect souls
from the fire Jesus names in this parable (Matthew 13:42; 2
Thessalonians 1:7–9).
Hope for the Righteous
“The righteous will shine forth as the sun” (Matthew 13:43). That is
the future of the faithful—an abundant entrance into the everlasting
kingdom of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ (2 Peter 1:11). Christ
rules now; He will return with His angels to finish the harvest
(Matthew 13:49; 2 Thessalonians 1:7–8). The barn stands ready for
gathered wheat.
Hearing and Entering the
Kingdom
Jesus’ repeated appeal—“He who has ears to hear, let him hear”—calls
for action. Entrance into the kingdom comes by new birth of water
and Spirit (John 3:5). The apostles preached and practiced this
confession of faith, repentance, and baptism into Christ’s death and
resurrection (Mark 16:16; Matthew 28:19–20; Acts 2:38–41; Acts 8:12,
35–39; Acts 22:16; Romans 6:3–5; Galatians 3:26–27; Colossians 2:12;
Acts 16:30–34). Baptized believers then learn to observe all that
Christ commanded, growing sturdy roots and clear fruit in a mixed
field.
The Parable of the Wheat and
the Tares Sermon Outline
- Text: Matthew 13:24–30,
36–43
- Thesis: Christ’s kingdom
advances in a mixed world; God preserves His people through
patience now and perfect judgment at the harvest.
- I. The Parable Stated (Matt
13:24–30)
- A. Good seed sown; an
enemy sows tares
- B. Visibility arrives
at heading; master orders patience
- C. Harvest plan: bind
tares for burning; gather wheat into barn
- II. The Parable Explained
(Matt 13:36–43)
- A. Sower—Son of Man;
field—world
- B. Good seed—sons of
the kingdom; tares—sons of the evil one
- C. Enemy—devil;
harvest—end of the age; reapers—angels
- D. Removal of stumbling
and lawlessness; furnace of fire; shining of the righteous
- III. Lessons for the
Present
- A. God’s patience
nurtures growth (2 Pet 3:9)
- B. Church discipline
remains required inside congregational life (Matt 18:15–17;
1 Cor 5; 2 Thess 3:6, 14–15)
- C. The kingdom exists
now and awaits consummation (Col 1:13; Rev 1:9; 1 Cor
15:24–26)
- IV. Warnings to Heed
- A. Lawlessness exposed
at judgment (Matt 7:21–23)
- B. Abide in Christ’s
teaching (2 John 9)
- C. Act under Christ’s
authority (Col 3:17)
- D. Eternal consequences
declared (Matt 13:42; 2 Thess 1:7–9; Matt 13:49)
- V. Hope Held Out
- A. The righteous will
shine (Matt 13:43; 2 Pet 1:11)
- B. Harvest certainty;
angels as reapers (Matt 13:39; 2 Thess 1:7–8)
- VI. Entering and Growing
- A. New birth of water
and Spirit (John 3:5)
- B. Apostolic call and
pattern: believe, repent, be baptized, learn (Mark 16:16;
Matt 28:19–20; Acts 2:38–41; Acts 8; Acts 22:16; Rom 6:3–5;
Gal 3:26–27; Col 2:12; Acts 16:30–34)
Call to Action
Plant your life where the Sower’s hand placed His seed. Submit to
His word, turn from lawlessness, and come into Christ through
baptism. If you have grown among entangling roots, ask the Lord to
deepen your convictions and purify your loyalties. If a brother or
sister needs gentle correction, follow Jesus’ steps with humility
and courage. Keep your eyes on the barn and your heart set on
shining in the Father’s kingdom.
Scripture Reference List
- Matthew 13:24–30, 36–43 —
Parable and Jesus’ explanation of wheat, tares, enemy, harvest,
and outcome
- 2 Peter 3:9 — The Lord’s
longsuffering grants time for repentance and growth
- Matthew 18:15–17 —
Instruction for addressing sin within the congregation
- 1 Corinthians 5 — Purity
and restorative discipline among saints
- 2 Thessalonians 3:6, 14–15
— Withdraw from disorderly conduct while admonishing as family
- Colossians 1:13 — Transfer
into the kingdom of the Son now
- Revelation 1:9 — Shared
participation in the kingdom in the present age
- 1 Corinthians 15:24–26 —
Christ delivers the kingdom to the Father at His coming
- Matthew 7:21–23 — Entrance
requires doing the Father’s will; lawlessness rejected
- 2 John 9 — Abiding in the
doctrine of Christ maintains fellowship with God
- Colossians 3:17 — Words and
deeds carried out under Christ’s authority
- 2 Thessalonians 1:7–9 —
Retribution on those who do not know God or obey the gospel
- Matthew 13:49 — Angels
separate the wicked from among the righteous
- 2 Peter 1:11 — Abundant
entrance into the everlasting kingdom
- John 3:5 — New birth of
water and Spirit for kingdom entrance
- Mark 16:16 — Belief and
baptism joined in salvation message
- Matthew 28:19–20 — Make
disciples, baptize, teach all Jesus commanded
- Acts 2:38–41 — Repentance,
baptism for forgiveness, and reception of the Spirit
- Acts 8:12, 35–39 —
Preaching Jesus leads to baptism into Christ
- Acts 22:16 — Arise and be
baptized, washing away sins
- Romans 6:3–5 — Baptism into
Christ’s death and resurrection life
- Galatians 3:26–27 —
Baptized into Christ, clothed with Christ
- Colossians 2:12 — Buried
with Him in baptism, raised through faith
- Acts 16:30–34 — Household
faith responds in baptism the same hour of the night
Prepared by Pat Cowden |