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Scripture Reading: Matthew 13:31-35
Passage: Mark 4:30-34
Intro: Have you ever told what you thought was an insignificant lie, that turned into something that you could not believe that a little lie could get you into this much trouble?
When I was younger I remember watching the movie “the Titanic” with my parents.
Maybe I was 7 or 8 years old, and my dad, says “Daniel your great grandma came over on the Titanic.
She was one of the little kids that survived.
Now my Dad was joking.
He knew I was gullible, and he enjoyed telling this little lie.
Well I grew up thinking my great grandmother came over on the Titanic.
I would tell teachers and friends.
I thought it was cool.
Until one day when I was in college I got curious, I knew my great grandmothers name, so I looked at the survivors manifests online, and I could not find her name.
So i called my Dad and I asked him, hey, your grandmothers name was __________ right?
He said yes.
I then said, well I couldn’t find her name on the Titanic survivor lists.
Well he then told me that my grandmother did not come over on the Titanic.
So my dad told what he believed to be an insignificant lie.
But it turned out that lie turned into something bigger.
Because I remember doing family history papers growing up and putting that my Great grandmother was a survivor of the Titanic.
But it is funny how something seemingly insignificant can turn into something great.
In today’s passage we will see Jesus use a parable to show how God’s kingdom may seem insignificant, but that is the furthest from the truth.
Passage Context: As we continue going through the book of Mark, we find ourselves looking at the teachings and parables that Jesus taught.
Remember that up to this point, Mark has already established that Jesus is God, and the Son of God.
We have seen Jesus perform miracles, and cast out demons, and we have seen in Mark chapter 4 that Jesus has already taught three parables, and today we are looking at the fourth parable that Jesus taught.
READ PASSAGE HERE
Passage explanation: As we look this passage remember the parable that we looked at last week, the parable that Jesus taught right before passage.
We see that Jesus compared the kingdom of God, not to an earthly kingdom or to a king, but instead Jesus compared the kingdom of God to a lowly farmer.
And now we see that Jesus is comparing the kingdom of God to a mustard seed.
Main Point: The main point of this passage is to show how the kingdom of God might not seem like much to crowd that Jesus is speaking to, but one day that kingdom will be fulfilled and greater than anything man can perceive.
Call to Action: the passage states three truth’s about the kingdom of Christ.
Part 1: Jesus asks.
Mark 4:30
Point 1: Christ’s kingdom is a mystery to the unbelieving heart.
Explanation:Look at how Jesus starts this parable, by asking a question.
Look at what Jesus asks in verse 30, “The He (Jesus) said, ‘To what shall we liken the kingdom of God?’” Now realize that the question we see in this passage is similar to the way that Jesus started previous parable.
He started the parable of the growing seed with a simile (A comparison using like or as) to compare the kingdom of God to a humble farmer.
But now to start this parable Jesus asks a rhetorical question.
“To what shall we liken the Kingdom of God?”
In the third parable in chapter four Jesus started the parable with a simile.
But in his fourth parable he starts with a rhetorical question.
A rhetorical question, is a question that is not meant to be answered or is meant to be answered mentally, and is not meant to be answered out loud.
Jesus starts this parable with asking a rhetorical question, but then we see that Jesus rephrases the rhetorical question.
Look at the next line, “Or with what parable shall we picture it?”
So now he clarifies his question and asks with what story or parable or illustration shall we picture it?
So Jesus
Illustration: Today I go walk into a meeting with my brother’s work.
And I wouldn’t know a thing that they were talking about, because I am not apart of that company.
But if I joined that company, it would be their job to train and make me familiar.
And they would recruit me to.
So church it should not surprise us if we find someone who knows nothing abotu Scripture.
I remember one of the first times I went door to door.
I was at SWBTS and we shared the gospel with a woman who you could see her apartment from SWBTS property.
And she had never heard the gospel before.
Her idea of God was an angel on this shoulder and a demon on the other telling her what to do.
Application: Church I want you realize something, to the unbeliever they will not understand God’s kingdom.
They will not understand why you go to church.
And that is ok.
(Go to illustration and come back)
Look to a certain extent the kingdom of God is a mystery to the believer, now imagine being an unbeliever.
And the mystery of God’s kingdom.
Church it is our duty to go and share the gospel.
Transition:Well if you had just heard the parable that he gave last week, you would say, well a farmer who plants a seed.
But that is not the answer that Jesus gives.
Look at how he answers his rhetorical question:
Part 2: Jesus Answers.
Mark 4:31-32
Point 2: Christ’s kingdom requires the believing heart to trust in God for fulfillment of Christ’s kingdom.
Explanation: Look at how Jesus answers his question in verse 31, “It is like.”
Now let us pause here, we see the pronoun it, so we need to ask ourselves, who or what does “It” represent?
It represents the Kingdom of God.
So we can rephrase this question to read, “The Kingdom of God is like “A mustard seed which, when it is sown on the ground, is smaller than all the seeds on earth.”
So I want you to realize what Jesus just compared the kingdom of God to.
He says that it is like a mustard seed (Go to illustration and come back).
And now look at what he says about the mustard seed, he says that when it is sown, it is the smaller than all the seeds on earth.
So this small seed, gets planted.
But now look at verse 32, “But when it is sown, it grows up and becomes greater than all herbs, and shoots out large branches,” So now Jesus states that the kingdom of God is like this mustard seed.
At first it is small, and not much to think about, but then when it is planted and watered, this seed will produce a tree, and look at what this small seed that turns into a seed is able to do, “and shoots out large branches, so that the birds of the air may nest under its shade.”
Realize something, that this tree could grow up to 12 feet.
So that is is basically as tall as someone 6’2 standing on my shoulders.
This seed turns into that.
So now Jesus says that this seed turns into a tree that its branches is able to provide shelter for the birds.
This small tiny insignificant seed is able to turn into a plant that provides shelter to animals.
Illustration: Now I just happen to have a mustard seed seasoning that you get at the grocery store.
I want you to look at how small this seed is.
Application: Now what does Jesus mean when he compares the kingdom of God to this mustard seed?
See the point that Jesus is making is that the kingdom that he came to fulfill started out humbling, gaining very little support during his life, remember the religious elite rejected the kingdom of God.
The very kingdom of God that John the Baptist announced was at hand, and that the people should repent and turn from their sins.
Yet Jesus is saying that this small seed of the kingdom of God will find complete fulfillment when Christ returns.
See Church I want you to realize that you might feel like you are apart of a kingdom that is constantly losing, I mean we live in a society that is rapidly becoming more hostile to the gospel, and to our beliefs.
One day, you might find yourself even questioning, is it worth it?
Is the hostility even worth it.
Well here is Jesus saying that this small kingdom will grow even greater.
Even greater than what it is now.
The kingdom of God is not insignifficant, it is greater than all.
And we must push for it to grow, not grow our own kingdoms and agendas.
For our kingdom will one day crumble, But God’s kingdom will remain forever.
Illustration 2: Remember something church, last week saw the passing of Queen Elizabeth, and she was one of the wealthiest people in the world.
Yet when she died, her money remained.
Her homes remained.
And one day the products of her wealth will rust and decay.
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