Trinity Vineyard Sunday Morning
Trinity Vineyard Sunday Morning
Receiving the Kingdom
Use Left/Right to seek, Home/End to jump to start or end. Hold shift to jump forward or backward.
Listening to the words of the King
Parables are given to make us wise — to shape how we live, to train our character, to form us spiritually. This parable gives us the message of the kingdom so that we might hear, respond, and be fruitful. “Hearing” is central to this parable. In the language Jesus was telling this story, the word translated to hear also means to obey. That is no coincidence.
It’s possible to be physically present, religiously active, and spiritually closed. You can come on Sunday. You can hear sermons. You can read Scripture and still not really hear. Not because the message is unclear — but because the heart is guarded. We fear that listening too hard will draw our hearts to places we don’t want to go.
The crowd would have known there was meaning beneath the surface of what they heard but exactly what Jesus meant would not have been obvious The key turning point is verse 10: “The disciples came to him and asked, ‘Why do you speak to the people in parables?’” “Disciples” here does not mean only the Twelve. Anyone who wanted could come closer and ask. This is not a closed group. This is about attitude.
Those who come and ask are given more. Those who stay at a distance hear the stories — but do not really listen.
Jesus says: “Whoever has will be given more… whoever does not have, even what they have will be taken from them.” These two groups are self-selected.
This is not about intellectual ability. It is about receptivity.
They are not smarter.
They are not more moral.
They are not more religious
They are not more deserving.
They are simply willing.
Willing to listen.
Willing to be taught.
Willing to admit they don’t fully understand.
When people responded by seeking Jesus and wanting to understand more, he turned towards them and invited them to come even closer. When people stayed superficial, no further explanation was given. Not because Jesus wanted to hide — but because lack of receptivity prevented further progress. These parables are the King graciously telling us what the kingdom is really like.