Last Sunday, I was preaching about Jesus again. I seem to be
stuck on that subject.
Anyway, the text was Matthew 13:1-23. In the first few
verses, Jesus tells a crowd what is usually called the parable of the sower
(although a better name is the parable of the soils). He just tells the story
and leaves it hanging there. He offers no explanation or interpretation.
It’s easy to imagine the people asking each other what that was all about.
When Jesus and his disciples are alone, they ask him, “Why
do you speak to them in parables?” They wonder why Jesus doesn’t come right out
and say what he means instead of telling stories that people have to figure out
for themselves. Jesus answers. “The reason I speak to them in parables is that
seeing they do not perceive, and hearing they do not listen, nor do they
understand.”
I think Jesus understood that if you offer propositions and
arguments to people who are predisposed to reject what you’re saying, they’ll
just say “No” and be done with it (and you), but if you tell them an intriguing
but puzzling story, they’ll become—and perhaps remain—engaged with it (and you).
As I was preaching, a thought leapt into my mind: perhaps Christians
would do well to think of our lives as parables.
Jesus told compelling and
confounding stories. His parables caused his listeners to consider
counterintuitive and countercultural possibilities. His stories, like all good
stories, drew his hearers in and, once they were in, held them there.
It’s easy to imagine the people who heard Jesus’ parables continuing
to think and talk about them for a long time.
What would it mean for our lives to be parables? How could
our lives affect people so that they become and remain engaged with the
possibilities that our ways of life present?
Our lives are parables when they involve ways of living that
confuse and confound people. They are parables when they make people wonder and
ponder. They are parables when they demonstrate the ways of Christ in a world
that seems to want none of them.
We Christians offer our best witness to the crowds when we
demonstrate radical love, radical grace, radical understanding, radical generosity,
and radical forgiveness.
They’ll wonder what that’s all about. They’ll wonder why we’re
so weird.
They’ll think. They’ll ponder.
They may come around to Jesus. They may not.
But they’re more likely to eventually respond to the witness
of a living parable than they are to a “Christian witness” that comes down to
self-righteous judgmentalism.
So let’s be Jesus’ parables. Let’s be the story of God’s
love, grace, and mercy . . .
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