Weeds Are Crowding
Out the Wheat
a sermon based on Matthew 13:24-30,36-43
by Rev. Thomas Hall
For many of us, the new millennium began
late. September 11th, 2001 forced us into a very dangerous and angry world. Weve
wept through unnumbered memorials for lives lost on that Tuesday morningboth for the
rescuers and for the dead down under. Our safe, were-in-charge world is gone and now
we must live with global anxiety that continues to haunt us. The weeds are taking over the
garden.
Recently we welcomed a student to our home to be our guest while he attended language
class. What should have been unbounded joy was more a cautious, strained celebration.
Bader is from Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. And a Muslim. I couldnt help but think of the
impact that a Palestinian student might have on insensitive, angry neighbors in this new
millennium. Authorities watch our students activities when he leaves for school. My
fear is in part, based on another Palestinian student who attended our church years
agoKamiel my friendwho ended up getting so brutalized in a small rural
restaurant, that he required hospitalization. I have personally seen the weeds crowding
out the wheat.
In other parts of the world we face a "subcontinental nuclear Armageddon," as
the Times of India reports, that could "fill the subcontinent with mushroom clouds
and millions of incinerated bodies. [1] " I wish we could just send in the weed
pickers and say, "Go get em! Destroy the bad guys."
At least the kingdom of heaven is pure, for heavens sake! But turns out that even
in our most sacred places of worship, weeds have scarred and damaged innocent wheat.
Tragically, some of our wheat have turned out to be more weeds than wheat:
"Archbishop Implicated in Sex Scandal," among recent headlines. To shift
metaphors from agrarian to animals, one minister admitted, ". . . the
fish business these days is not as simple as it once seemed. The human fish
now come out of outrageously polluted cultural waters, and they bring all the effects of
their pollutedness with them." [2] Were living in a new millennium in which we
are no longer assured of the outcome of evil and good. And sometimes its very
difficult to tell a wheat from a weed.
Perhaps we can learn from Jesus little tale about wheat and weeds. A man sows
good seed, and then an enemy comes and sows weeds. We can understand this; all crops have
at least some weeds. Jesus tells the truth. There are going to be weeds in life. Weeds in
the world, weeds in life, weeds in yours and my community of faith.
Weeds are our enemy, Jesus says. Always have been and whoever puts them in the field is
trying to put one over on us. Weeds stymie our best efforts and thwart every good and
healthy and wholesome thing we do. One preacher has a list of the weeds. [3] On his
list are people in the world, in the neighborhood, in churches who just dont fit in.
They dont contribute, dont help, dont attend, dont do their share.
He says, they just drag everybody down. They are the undesirables. And, according to the
story their presence is the work of the enemy.
So the servants come and say, "what should we do with the weeds? Pull em up
and root em out?" Not a bad suggestion. Just be rid of them and move forward
with our lives. "Just send em back where they came from." "Oh,
theyre just lazytake em off welfare." "They just want to have
babies to get government hand-outs." "They havent been to church in years;
just take em off the church rolls." "Lets just get rid of
them."
Ive just finished reading Ezra and Nehemiah. Thats the solution they arrive
at. "Just divorce those women who are not really truly, full-blooded national
stock." Didnt matter, of course, that those "stock" also had birthed
and borne their children, had taught them, fed them, suckled them, and loved those
children deeply. Just up and divorce themclean the church rolls. "We got to
have a pure, church roll. Reminds me of a doggerel my dad used to tell me, "What
orthodoxy! me and thee, although Im not always sure about thee."
Some I know would love to get rid of the group that meets in the upper room of our
church on Saturday nightSAs they call themselves. Persons who are sexually
addicted and admit as much. "We shouldnt have such people even near the
churchwhat will people think?" "Send em down to First Church, they
help those kind of people."
Heres what Jesus says to our normal reaction of removing the weeds from our
midst: "leave the weeds alone." Youre kidding! Leave them alone? In the
church? The wheat with the weeds? We should take a stand right? Draw the line between
right and wrong, the truth and the false, the good and the evil. But the supervisor says
to the hired hands, "leave the weeds alone." Why? "Because you start
pulling the weeds up, you damage to the wheat."
A minister once said he was holding a revival meeting in a church in Polk County. [4]
The minister came to him just before the beginning of the first service.
"Were going to have to do something during the service tonight."
"What?" the guest minister asked.
"Were going to have to call for the fellowship and peace of the
church."
"Why?"
"Well," said the pastor, "I messed up. I asked a certain widow in this town
for a date, being that Im a married man and have a family. I shouldnt have
done it. She turned me down, but then she went and told everybody. Now its all over
the church. So youve got to call for the fellowship and peace of the church."
So thats what happened. At the close of the service, everybody sat down and then
the guest minister said, "All who are in true fellowship and peace with God and each
other, please stand." So everyone standsexcept the host minister. When the
congregation sat back down, the minister got up and confessed his sin.
"I messed up, pure and simple. Ive been wringing my heart out in sorrow and
regret, but I want you to forgive me.
"Is there a motion that we forgive the brother?" A man stood up and said,
"I move we forgive him. Ive done the same thing a dozen times myself."
His wife looked at him; everybody looked at him. They forgave the preacher, but then
they had to have another meeting to forgive this fellow. He kept saying, "But I
didnt mean it that way. I didnt mean it literally." But his confession
triggered something else and that triggered something else, and the guest minister said,
"We had two weeks of weed-pulling instead of revival. It did more harm than
good."
The problem is, is that we just dont know who the weeds are and who the wheat
are. In a scene right out of the old Dennis the Menace sitcom, dad is weeding the front
garden. Then Dennis comes up and observes this garden ritual. After watching for several
minutes, he asks,
"Hey, dad?"
"What, son?"
"How do you know which are the flowers and which are the weeds?"
"Heh, heh . . . Oh your mom will let me know."
[off screen shriek]: "HENRY! Youre pulling out all of the flowers!"
Let me close with three reasons why we are not supposed to go around plucking up weeds.
First, even weeds may turn out to be useful. Weeds were not mowed down in ancient
Palestinethey provided a valuable source for fires. Not much coal or lumber lying
around Palestine in those days. Just manure and well, weeds. So at the harvest they were
put to good use. By letting both weeds and wheat grow together, you had the perfect
resources for making bread: flour and fire! So have patience. Wait until God decides how
to use the resources in Gods field.
Not only that, but who is insightful enough to make the call? Who can tell the
difference between a weed and wheat? We are not qualified to pick the good from the bad.
Darnel looks identical to wheat at the beginning. Just when weve got that stalk that
looks all the world like a weed bent over to be hacked off, the grains of wheat fall out.
Barbara Brown Taylor says that during the crusades, knights from Europe passed through an
Arab town on their way to holy land and killed everyone in sight. Later they turned the
bodies over and found crosses around most of their victims necks. It never occurred
to them that Christians came in brown as well as white. [5]
Finally, if we choose to go around yanking weeds out of Gods field we may run the
risk of turning from good seed into bad. Havent you discovered that in any holy war,
be it in the Middle East or in the middle of your faith community, we can get so riled up
that we begin acting like weedsfull of prickles and poison? I have seen many
well-meaning and sincere persons get so passionately involved in a holy cause that in the
end, everyone on both sides becomes the bad guy. No one is innocent. All are hurt and
dirtied.
A mixed field includes wheat and weeds together. The only way to fight the poison of
the weeds is to make sure that were producing good, wholesome fruit. Leave the rest
to God. If we give ourselves to God, God will do the rest. Amen.
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[1] The Week (June 14, 2002): 2.
[2] Gordon MacDonald quoted in Current Thoughts and Trends (June 2002): 5.
[3] Fred Craddock, The Cherry Log Sermons (Louisville: Westminster/John Knox Press,
2001), page 26.
[4] The guest minister was Paul Culpepper; cited in Cherry Log Sermons, page 28.
[5] Barbara Brown Taylor, Bread of Angels (Cambridge: Cowley Publications, 1998),
page 148.