Monday, July 17, 2023

Having Ears to Hear

“[T]his is the one who hears the word and understands it….”.

 

Matthew 13 provides us with a version of the Parable of the Sower. It is one of the best known of Jesus’ parables and scholars believe that at least the first part of it is certainly the authentic Jesus speaking to us. A version of this parable is also found in the Gospels of Mark, Luke and the Sayings Gospel of Thomas. 

 It’s a common tendency to sum up this parable in terms of a line we often see appended to the parables in all the Gospels:

Let anyone with ears listen.

 

They Just Don’t Get It…

There is a sense in this assertion that the good news of Jesus is easy to understand even as it will not be heard by everyone, particularly those unwilling to consider it. But I think this parable has more to say to us than that.

First, there is no small amount of self-serving mentality in that understanding. The implication is that we understand it but everyone else out there just doesn’t – or won’t – get it. You should hear echoes of election, of specialness, of chosenness in these understandings. And consider how readily such notions play out in condescension toward those who do not share our understandings, condescension that easily can become the means of persecuting outsiders when the elect gain political power.          This is a tendency that the Christian church has had to guard against from its very beginning. 

But, I think there is more to consider here than who gets it right and who doesn’t. I always find it interesting to read the portions of the gospels that were omitted by the members of the lectionary committee who designated our weekly readings. In today’s Gospel, the reading from Matthew 13 ends at verse 9 and picks up again in verse 19. There is a lot to consider in those missing verses.

Jesus Doesn’t Start With a Tabula Rasa

For one thing, verse 10 begins with the disciples asking Jesus the obvious question: Why do you instruct people only in parables? It’s a fair question that points toward a very human tendency we all share: a concern for comfort. We want Jesus to cut to the chase, to tell us what we need to know. Underlying this question is the reality that having to wrestle with teachings and reflecting on how they impact our lives is not something most of us are willing to do. If we were to rephrase the disciples’ question, it would be something like this: Jesus, why don’t you just tell us what to believe?

 


But Jesus is not interested in filling empty heads, hearts and souls with his teachings. Unlike John Locke, he does not presume that his listeners are operating out of a tabula rasa, a blank slate, on which he simply has to inscribe eternal truths. It might be a lot easier if that were true. But Jesus recognizes that if he did just tell people what to believe, that would be his faith, not theirs. It would not belong to them in any kind of existential way.

Jesus knows that all of us bring a lifetime of learning, shaping by our families and our culture, and a wide range of personal experiences to the hearing of his words. And how we hear them will often turn on what we bring to that hearing as much as what we encounter there. 

But Matthew cannot just leave things dangling there and so he has Jesus provide us with an explanation for his use of parables which reflects his deep awareness of human nature. Jesus knows that his listeners will respond to his words at the point they find themselves on their spiritual journeys. And that is apparent as we look around ourselves today.



We see those who can only apprehend the parable at a surface level. Matthew’s Jesus says they immediately receive his words with joy but have no depth to draw upon. Their visions will be shallow and brittle, highly defensive when challenged by others. We see that in our own time and place in those who can readily quote scripture but have no real understanding of its context or its implications. 

 

We see others who hear these words through the thorny lens of our consumerist culture whose competing god is comfort and whose ritual is the amassing of ever more material goods, power and status even as they are never able to satisfy us. These are everyday people who mean well and, truth be told, engage in the same behaviors all of us in this culture are trained to see as normal.

But for many there comes a point of decision: which god will you worship? And it should not be surprising that many resist the implications of a gospel whose primary commandment is to love one’s neighbor as oneself – including one’s enemies – rather than seeing them as means or obstacles to the demands we have been trained to believe we are entitled to make. As Jesus said, “the cares of the world and the lure of wealth” readily choke our ability to hear and respond to his calling.

 


Finally Jesus describes those who hear the word and understand it. It is these who are capable of bearing fruit. So it would seem that following the way of Jesus is a privilege limited to a chosen few, a privilege that includes an entitlement to condescend to all the hoi polloi who just don’t get it.

But I’m pretty sure that’s not what Jesus meant.

Different Starting Points to Hear the Parables

Much of my life in academia has been spent in studying human development systems from moral reasoning to cultural evolution to faith development. Two observations guide that study. First, human beings are found at varying levels of development in every culture and across time. There have always been a handful of sages, mystics and prophets who have seen a bigger picture than most of us and there have always been masses of folks who willingly joined mobs like those standing outside Pilate’s palace screaming “His blood be on our heads and those of our children,” something a good Jew would never have said. People are where they are on their spiritual journey. And they can only hear at the level of development they bring to the hearing.

But, second and more importantly, all developmental systems are dynamic. Most of us are capable of growing and becoming throughout our lives. We are not the same people we were as children, adolescents or middle agers, even as we were earlier in our elderhood. We do not think the same way we did then and we build upon our learning and life experiences as we go, forming new understandings that incorporate our previous ways of thinking, leaving behind those aspects which no longer serve us and embracing new aspects which now make sense to us. 


All of us have experienced ourselves at levels of shallowness, lacking depth and rootedness when confronting a reality larger than our immediate lives. And all of us regularly experience the conflict between the deeper values of the gospel and the siren songs of our consumerist culture which threaten to choke our spiritual lives with the cares of the world. 

At some level, every one of us has played all the characters in this parable. We have all been where others are now. And that demands our understanding and our willingness to take others where they are today.

I think Jesus knew that we are all works in progress and he evidences that in his use of parables. He challenged people to think, he didn’t tell them what they must believe. And he knew that his listeners would hear his teachings at whatever level of human development they presented.

But he also knew one other thing.

 

Some Seeds Lies Dormant for Awhile

 

It’s no accident that Jesus uses the symbol of seeds being planted. A popular meme online these days proclaims “We cannot force someone to hear a message they are not ready to receive. But we must never underestimate the power of planting a seed.” 



Jesus knew that even those who were not grasped by his good news immediately had a lifetime to think about what he’d presented them. As Nobel prize author Rabindranath Tagore observed, “The one who plants trees, knowing that he will never sit in their shade, has at least started to understand the meaning of life.”

 Jesus was planting seeds in his listeners. And while they may not immediately sprout, thrive and produce fruit, they were always present, in some cases lying dormant waiting for the right combination of conditions to arrive when they could sprout, take root and grow.  

 


In my personal experience, that has always been true. The wisdom I heard as a kid, as a young adult, in universities and seminaries, wisdom experienced in the countryside of Central America and the halls of Congress, have all proven to have their own timetables. I often experience the famous light bulb moment when I suddenly realize, “Oh, *that’s* what was going on there!”  and realize I am in the debt of those who planted that seed in me. And I suspect many of you have had similar experiences.

 


As I see it, Jesus calls us to exercise patience with those we might otherwise dismiss as superficial, obtuse or even malevolent. And that patience starts with ourselves. The same seed that Jesus planted in us lies within all who have heard his calling. Those seeds wait the right time to sprout and grow to the extent any of us are capable and willing to let them.  But it will require patience, the ability to delay gratification and the willingness to suffer the pain that growth always requires, just as M. Scott Peck taught us in his book The Road Less Travelled.

 

Who Was Your Sower? In Whom Were You the Sower?

 


So ask yourselves. Where along your own spiritual journey do you find yourself this day? Who have been the people who made your way to this milestone possible?  Who were the sowers who planted seeds in your life that may have taken years before they sprouted and grew? To whom do you owe your gratitude for helping you become the person you are today?

Conversely, where in your own life have you been the sower, implanting seeds in the lives of people which may not sprout until long after you are gone? If our lives are the only Gospels some people might ever read, as the apocryphal statement often attributed to St. Francis of Assisi asserts, what Gospel will they encounter in us?

Like Jesus, I have no answers to offer you. But I leave you with those questions to wrestle with, just as Jesus did. And I close with a slightly adapted version of today’s collect:

 


Holy One, we ask you to hear the prayers of your people who call upon you. Grant that we may know and understand what things we ought to do, and also may have grace and power faithfully to accomplish them; through Jesus Christ our Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and for ever. Amen.

 A sermon preached Pentecost VII, July 16, 2023, at St. Richard's Episcopal Church, Winter Park, Florida. You may watch the delivery of this sermon at the link provided below beginning at 20:00  

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1Zh5nNX2Xmg

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Harry Scott Coverston

Orlando, Florida

frharry@cfl.rr.com

hcoverston.orlando@gmail.com

If the unexamined life is not worth living, surely an unexamined belief system, be it religious or political, is not worth holding. Most things worth considering do not come in sound bites.

Those who believe religion and politics aren't connected don't understand either. – Mahatma Gandhi

For what does G-d require of you but to do justice, and to love kindness, and to walk humbly with your G-d?  - Micah 6:8, Hebrew Scriptures

Do not be daunted by the enormity of the world's grief. Do justly, now. Love mercy, now. Walk humbly now. You are not obligated to complete the work, but neither are you free to abandon it. Rabbi Rami ShapiroWisdom of the Jewish Sages (1993)

   © Harry Coverston, 2023

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