Seed Growing Secretly
Text:
Mark 4:26–29
Introduction:
A Quiet Field, A Certain Harvest
Jesus describes a farmer who scatters seed and then goes about
ordinary days and nights. Beneath the surface, unseen by the farmer,
the seed sprouts and grows. The earth “by itself” produces—first the
blade, then the head, then the full grain. When the grain ripens,
the farmer swings the sickle because harvest has arrived. This
picture teaches how the kingdom advances: the seed carries power,
growth unfolds in stages, laborers work faithfully, and harvest
surely comes.
The Picture
Jesus Draws
The Lord places our attention on three elements—seed, time, and
harvest. The farmer’s role is clear: sow and later reap. The
mysterious middle—the hidden processes in the soil—belongs to what
Jesus calls the seed’s God-given power. The scene encourages steady
work and patient confidence rather than hurry and worry.
The Seed and
Its Power
Scripture identifies the seed as the word of God (Luke 8:11). The
word carries life and effectiveness that do not depend on human
flair. Isaiah wrote that God’s word accomplishes what He sends it to
do and does not return empty (Isaiah 55:10–11). The gospel itself is
God’s power unto salvation (Romans 1:16). People are born again
through the incorruptible seed of the word (1 Peter 1:23). When the
word is sown plainly and purely, the field receives what produces
life.
The Sower’s
Work: Faithful, Ordinary, Ongoing
The farmer in Jesus’ story scatters seed and then keeps ordinary
rhythms—sleeping and rising. He does his part without trying to pry
open the soil. Evangelism and edification follow the same wisdom. We
sow widely and consistently (Ecclesiastes 11:4–6). We preach the
word in season and out of season (2 Timothy 4:2). We remain steady
and refuse to grow weary, knowing we will reap in due time if we do
not lose heart (Galatians 6:9). The task calls for diligence in
sowing and readiness when harvest presents itself (John 4:35).
Growth in
Stages: Blade, Head, Full Grain
Jesus highlights a sequence. Spiritual growth honors the same
pattern. New disciples begin as babes who crave pure teaching
(Hebrews 5:12–14). With time, practice, and teaching, understanding
deepens and fruit becomes evident (2 Peter 3:18; James 1:22–25).
Congregations follow the pattern as well—seed sown, shoots
appearing, maturity forming. The sequence calls for patience,
nourishment, and measured expectations that fit the stage.
Guardrails
for the Field: Keep to the Seed
The Lord’s work advances through the Lord’s word. Methods that
elevate human tradition or worldly philosophy never replace the seed
(Colossians 2:8, 22–23). Scripture warns against adding to or taking
from what God has revealed (Deuteronomy 4:2; 12:32; 1 Corinthians
4:6; Revelation 22:18–19). The farmer does not swap seed in the bag.
Disciples honor the same wisdom by teaching only what the Lord has
authorized (Colossians 3:17) and by arranging congregational life
according to the apostolic pattern.
What the
Farmer Does Not Know—and Why That Matters
Jesus notes that the farmer “does not know how” the seed springs to
life. This acknowledgement frees laborers from burdens they cannot
carry. Hidden work in hearts belongs to what God accomplishes
through His word. Our task remains clear—teach clearly, live
consistently, answer questions, urge obedience, and remain patient
(James 5:7–8). Anxiety gives way to perseverance when we remember
where growth truly resides (1 Corinthians 3:6–7).
Harvest
Arrives: Be Ready
Ripeness requires action. When grain is ready, the farmer brings in
the crop. Opportunities for reaping appear in seasons—individual
hearts open, communities become receptive, doors stand ajar. Wise
workers prepare to study with seekers, extend invitations, baptize
penitent believers, and fold the newborn into steady teaching and
fellowship (Matthew 28:19–20; Acts 2:41–42). Jesus’ language also
points forward to the final harvest at the end of the age, when
separation and reward occur without delay (Matthew 13:39–43). Both
realities urge readiness.
Measured
Results and Real Encouragement
Much of kingdom work looks ordinary—conversations, home studies,
children taught, daily consistency, prayers for wisdom, quiet acts
of service. Jesus honors these rhythms. The field grows while the
farmer sleeps and rises. Progress often arrives without fanfare;
fruit often forms over years. Do the next faithful thing today and
let the seed do what seed does.
Invitation
and Obedient Response
Entrance into the kingdom belongs to those who do the Father’s will
(Matthew 7:21). Scripture joins salvation to obeying Christ (Hebrews
5:9). The appointed response is plain: hear the gospel, believe in
Jesus, repent of sins, confess His name, and be baptized for the
remission of sins (Mark 16:16; Acts 2:38; 22:16; Romans 6:3–4; 1
Peter 3:21). Then continue in the apostles’ teaching, fellowship,
breaking of bread, and prayers (Acts 2:42). That is how the seed
takes root, grows, and bears grain.
Conclusion:
Sow Today, Trust Tomorrow, Reap When Ready
Jesus’ little field scene carries a steadying message. The seed you
scatter matters. The stages of growth matter. Your patience matters.
The harvest will come. Keep a full seed bag, keep your hands at the
task, and keep your eyes open for ripened grain.
Exhaustive
Sermon Outline
-
Text and
Theme
-
The Parable
Restated
-
Farmer
scatters seed
-
Ordinary
days and nights continue
-
Seed
sprouts and grows “by itself”
-
Stages:
blade, head, full grain
-
Ripeness
and reaping
-
The Seed
Identified
-
Word of
God as seed (Luke 8:11)
-
Word
accomplishes God’s purpose (Isaiah 55:10–11)
-
Gospel
as God’s power (Romans 1:16)
-
New
birth by incorruptible seed (1 Peter 1:23)
-
The Sower’s
Assignment
-
Sow
widely and steadily (Ecclesiastes 11:4–6)
-
Preach
the word consistently (2 Timothy 4:2)
-
Do all
in the name of the Lord (Colossians 3:17)
-
Do not
grow weary; reap in due season (Galatians 6:9)
-
Growth in
Stages
-
Blade:
beginnings, basics (Hebrews 5:12–14)
-
Head:
discernment forming (James 1:22–25)
-
Full
grain: visible fruit, stability (2 Peter 3:18)
-
Guardrails
for Laborers
-
Reject
human tradition as authority (Colossians 2:8, 22–23)
-
Neither
add to nor take from revealed teaching (Deuteronomy 4:2;
12:32; 1 Corinthians 4:6; Revelation 22:18–19)
-
What the
Farmer Does Not Know
-
Hidden
processes belong to God’s design
-
Confidence rooted in 1 Corinthians 3:6–7
-
Patience
learned from James 5:7–8
-
Harvest
Readiness
-
Recognize open doors (John 4:35)
-
Act
decisively when hearts are ripe (Acts 2:41–42)
-
Remember
the final harvest (Matthew 13:39–43)
-
The
Appointed Response and Ongoing Obedience
-
Hear,
believe, repent, confess, be baptized (Mark 16:16; Acts
2:38; 22:16; Romans 6:3–4; 1 Peter 3:21)
-
Continue
in the pattern (Acts 2:42; Matthew 28:19–20)
-
Do the
Father’s will; obey the Son (Matthew 7:21; Hebrews 5:9)
-
Encouragements for Daily Work
Call to
Action
Refill your seed bag this week: choose one person to study with and
one family to invite. Read Mark 4 aloud and pray for patience and
readiness. If you have delayed the Lord’s appointed response, arise
and be baptized, washing away your sins, calling on His name (Acts
22:16). Then begin sowing tomorrow morning.
Scripture
Reference List
-
Mark
4:26–29—Parable of the seed growing secretly; seed-power,
stages, certain harvest
-
Luke
8:11—The seed is the word of God
-
Isaiah
55:10–11—God’s word accomplishes His purpose
-
Romans
1:16—The gospel as God’s power unto salvation
-
1 Peter
1:23—New birth by the incorruptible word
-
Ecclesiastes
11:4–6—Sow morning and evening; do not wait on perfect
conditions
-
2 Timothy
4:2—Preach the word in every season
-
Galatians
6:9—Do not grow weary; reap in due time
-
James
5:7–8—Farmer’s patience; establish your hearts
-
1
Corinthians 3:6–7—Plant and water; God gives the increase
-
John
4:35—Fields white for harvest
-
Matthew
13:39–43—Harvest and final separation
-
Colossians
3:17—Do all in the name of the Lord
-
Deuteronomy
4:2; 12:32; 1 Corinthians 4:6; Revelation 22:18–19—Do not add to
or take from God’s word
-
Hebrews
5:12–14—Stages of maturity; solid food for the mature
-
2 Peter
3:18—Grow in knowledge of the Lord
-
James
1:22–25—Doers of the word blessed in doing
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Matthew
7:21—Entrance tied to doing the Father’s will
-
Hebrews
5:9—Eternal salvation to all who obey Him
-
Mark 16:16;
Acts 2:38; Acts 22:16; Romans 6:3–4; 1 Peter 3:21—Appointed
response to the gospel
-
Acts
2:41–42—Immediate obedience and continued devotion
-
Matthew
28:19–20—Make disciples; teach them to observe all He commanded
Prepared by David Hersey of the church of Christ at
Granby, MO
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