Parable of the Sower (Matthew 13:1-23)
JESUS tells the parable with His diciples..
(Mat 13:1) That same day Jesus left the house and went to the lakeside, where he sat down to teach.
(Mat 13:2) The crowd that gathered around him was so large that he got into a boat and sat in it, while the crowd stood on the shore.
(Mat 13:3) He used parables to tell them many things. "Once there was a man who went out to sow grain.
(Mat 13:4) As he scattered the seed in the field, some of it fell along the path, and the birds came and ate it up.
(Mat 13:5) Some of it fell on rocky ground, where there was little soil. The seeds soon sprouted, because the soil wasn't deep.
(Mat 13:6) But when the sun came up, it burned the young plants; and because the roots had not grown deep enough, the plants soon dried up.
(Mat 13:7) Some of the seed fell among thorn bushes, which grew up and choked the plants.
(Mat 13:8) But some seeds fell in good soil, and the plants bore grain: some had one hundred grains, others sixty, and others thirty."
(Mat 13:9) And Jesus concluded, "Listen, then, if you have ears!"
(Mat 13:10) Then the disciples came to Jesus and asked him, "Why do you use parables when you talk to the people?"
(Mat 13:11) Jesus answered, "The knowledge about the secrets of the Kingdom of heaven has been given to you, but not to them.
(Mat 13:12) For the person who has something will be given more, so that he will have more than enough; but the person who has nothing will have taken away from him even the little he has.
(Mat 13:13) The reason I use parables in talking to them is that they look, but do not see, and they listen, but do not hear or understand.
(Mat 13:14) So the prophecy of Isaiah applies to them: 'This people will listen and listen, but not understand; they will look and look, but not see,
(Mat 13:15) because their minds are dull, and they have stopped up their ears and have closed their eyes. Otherwise, their eyes would see, their ears would hear, their minds would understand, and they would turn to me, says God, and I would heal them.'
(Mat 13:16) "As for you, how fortunate you are! Your eyes see and your ears hear.
(Mat 13:17) I assure you that many prophets and many of God's people wanted very much to see what you see, but they could not, and to hear what you hear, but they did not.
(Mat 13:18) "Listen, then, and learn what the parable of the sower means.
(Mat 13:19) Those who hear the message about the Kingdom but do not understand it are like the seeds that fell along the path. The Evil One comes and snatches away what was sown in them.
(Mat 13:20) The seeds that fell on rocky ground stand for those who receive the message gladly as soon as they hear it.
(Mat 13:21) But it does not sink deep into them, and they don't last long. So when trouble or persecution comes because of the message, they give up at once.
(Mat 13:22) The seeds that fell among thorn bushes stand for those who hear the message; but the worries about this life and the love for riches choke the message, and they don't bear fruit.
(Mat 13:23) And the seeds sown in the good soil stand for those who hear the message and understand it: they bear fruit, some as much as one hundred, others sixty, and others thirty."
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