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Text -- Matthew 13:1-8 (NET)
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Robertson: Mat 13:1 - -- On that day ( en tēi hēmerai ekeinēi ).
So this group of parables is placed by Matthew on the same day as the blasphemous accusation and the vi...
On that day (
So this group of parables is placed by Matthew on the same day as the blasphemous accusation and the visit of the mother of Jesus. It is called "the Busy Day,"not because it was the only one, but simply that so much is told of this day that it serves as a specimen of many others filled to the full with stress and strain.
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Robertson: Mat 13:1 - -- Sat by the seaside ( ekathēto para tēn thalassan ).
The accusative case need give no difficulty. Jesus came out of the stuffy house and took his ...
Sat by the seaside (
The accusative case need give no difficulty. Jesus came out of the stuffy house and took his seat (
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Robertson: Mat 13:2 - -- And all the multitude stood on the beach ( kai pas ho ochlos epi ton aigialon histēkei ).
Past perfect tense of histēmi with imperfect sense, h...
And all the multitude stood on the beach (
Past perfect tense of
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Robertson: Mat 13:3 - -- Many things in parables ( polla en parabolais ).
It was not the first time that Jesus had used parables, but the first time that he had spoken so man...
Many things in parables (
It was not the first time that Jesus had used parables, but the first time that he had spoken so many and some of such length. He will use a great many in the future as in Luke 12 to 18 and Matt. 24 and 25. The parables already mentioned in Matthew include the salt and the light (Mat 5:13-16), the birds and the lilies (Mat 6:26-30), the splinter and the beam in the eye (Mat 7:3-5), the two gates (Mat 7:13.), the wolves in sheep’ s clothing (Mat 7:15), the good and bad trees (Mat 7:17-19), the wise and foolish builders (Mat 7:24-27), the garment and the wineskins (Mat 9:16.), the children in the market places (Mat 11:16.). It is not certain how many he spoke on this occasion. Matthew mentions eight in this chapter (the Sower, the Tares, the Mustard Seed, the Leaven, the Hid Treasure, the Pearl of Great Price, the Net, the Householder). Mark adds the Parable of the Lamp (Mar 4:21; Luk 8:16), the Parable of the Seed Growing of Itself (Mar 4:26-29), making ten of which we know. But both Mark (Mar 4:33) and Matthew (Mat 13:34) imply that there were many others. "Without a parable spake he nothing unto them"(Mat 13:34), on this occasion, we may suppose. The word parable (
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Robertson: Mat 13:3 - -- Behold, the sower went forth ( idou ēlthen ho speirōn ).
Matthew is very fond of this exclamation idou . It is "the sower,"not "a sower."Jesus ex...
Behold, the sower went forth (
Matthew is very fond of this exclamation
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Robertson: Mat 13:4 - -- As he sowed ( en tōi speirein auton ).
Literally, "in the sowing as to him,"a neat Greek idiom unlike our English temporal conjunction. Locative ca...
As he sowed (
Literally, "in the sowing as to him,"a neat Greek idiom unlike our English temporal conjunction. Locative case with the articular present infinitive.
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Robertson: Mat 13:4 - -- By the wayside ( para tēn hodon ).
People will make paths along the edge of a ploughed field or even across it where the seed lies upon the beaten ...
By the wayside (
People will make paths along the edge of a ploughed field or even across it where the seed lies upon the beaten track.
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Robertson: Mat 13:4 - -- Devoured ( katephagen ).
"Ate down."We say, "ate up."Second aorist active indicative of katesthiō (defective verb).
Devoured (
"Ate down."We say, "ate up."Second aorist active indicative of
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Robertson: Mat 13:5 - -- The rocky places ( ta petrōdē ).
In that limestone country ledges of rock often jut out with thin layers of soil upon the layers of rock.
The rocky places (
In that limestone country ledges of rock often jut out with thin layers of soil upon the layers of rock.
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Robertson: Mat 13:5 - -- Straightway they sprang up ( eutheōs exaneteilen ).
"Shot up at once"(Moffatt). Double compound (ex , out of the ground, ana , up). Ingressive aori...
Straightway they sprang up (
"Shot up at once"(Moffatt). Double compound (
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Robertson: Mat 13:6 - -- The sun was risen ( hēliou anateilantos ).
Genitive absolute. "The sun having sprung up"also, same verb except the absence of ex (anatellō , ex...
The sun was risen (
Genitive absolute. "The sun having sprung up"also, same verb except the absence of
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Robertson: Mat 13:7 - -- The thorns grew up ( anebēsan hai akanthai ).
Not "sprang up"as in Mat 13:5, for a different verb occurs meaning "came up"out of the ground, the se...
The thorns grew up (
Not "sprang up"as in Mat 13:5, for a different verb occurs meaning "came up"out of the ground, the seeds of the thorns being already in the soil, "upon the thorns"(
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Robertson: Mat 13:8 - -- Yielded fruit ( edidou karpon ).
Change to imperfect tense of didōmi , to give, for it was continuous fruit-bearing.
Yielded fruit (
Change to imperfect tense of
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Robertson: Mat 13:8 - -- Some a hundredfold ( ho men hekaton ).
Variety, but fruit. This is the only kind that is worth while. The hundredfold is not an exaggeration (cf. Gen...
Some a hundredfold (
Variety, but fruit. This is the only kind that is worth while. The hundredfold is not an exaggeration (cf. Gen 26:12). Such instances are given by Wetstein for Greece, Italy, and Africa. Herodotus (i. 93) says that in Babylonia grain yielded two hundredfold and even to three hundredfold. This, of course, was due to irrigation as in the Nile Valley.
Vincent: Mat 13:2 - -- Shore ( αἰγιαλὸν )
Rev., beach, that over which the sea (ἅλς ) rushes (ἀΐ́σσει ). The word for shore, ἀ...
Shore (
Rev., beach, that over which the sea (
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Vincent: Mat 13:3 - -- Parables ( παραβολαῖς )
From παρά , beside, and βάλλω , to throw. A parable is a form of teaching in which one thing ...
Parables (
From
The word is used with a wide range in scripture, but always involves the idea of comparison:
1. Of brief sayings, having an oracular or proverbial character. Thus Peter (Mat 15:15), referring to the words " If the blind lead the blind," etc., says, " declare unto us this parable. " Compare Luk 6:39. So of the patched garment (Luk 5:36), and the guest who assumes the highest place at the feast (Luk 14:7, Luk 14:11). Compare, also, Mat 24:39; Mar 13:28.
2. Of a proverb . The word for proverb (
3. Of a song or poem , in which an example is set up by way of comparison. See Mic 2:4; Hab 2:6.
4. Of a word or discourse which is enigmatical or obscure until the meaning is developed by application or comparison. It occurs along with the words
In this sense Christ uses parables symbolically to expound the mysteries of the kingdom of God; as utterances which conceal from one class what they reveal to another (Mat 13:11-17), and in which familiar facts of the earthly life are used figuratively to expound truths of the higher life. The un-spiritual do not link these facts of the natural life with those of the supernatural, which are not discerned by them (1Co 2:14), and therefore they need an interpreter of the relation between the two. Such symbols assume the existence of a law common to the natural and spiritual worlds under which the symbol and the thing symbolized alike work; so that the one does not merely resemble the other superficially, but stands in actual coherence and harmony with it. Christ formulates such a law in connection with the parables of the Talents and the Sower. " To him that hath shall be given. From him that hath not shall be taken away." That is a law of morals and religion, as of business and agriculture. One must have in order to make. Interest requires capital. Fruit requires not only seed but soil. Spiritual fruitfulness requires an honest and good heart. Similarly, the law of growth as set forth in the parable of the Mustard Seed, is a law common to nature and to the kingdom of God. The great forces in both kingdoms are germinal, enwrapped in small seeds which unfold from within by an inherent power of growth.
5. A parable is also an example or type; furnishing a model or a warning; as the Good Samaritan, the Rich Fool, the Pharisee and the Publican. The element of comparison enters here as between the particular incident imagined or recounted, and all cases of a similar kind.
The term parable, however, as employed in ordinary Christian phraseology, is limited to those utterances of Christ which are marked by a complete figurative history or narrative. It is thus defined by Goebel (" Parables of Jesus" ). " A narrative moving within the sphere of physical or human life, not professing to describe an event which actually took place, but expressly imagined for the purpose of representing, in pictorial figure, a truth belonging to the sphere of religion, and therefore referring to the relation of man or mankind to God."
In form the New Testament parables resemble the fable . The distinction between them does not turn on the respective use of rational and irrational beings speaking and acting. There are fables where the actors are human. Nor does the fable always deal with the impossible, since there are fables in which an animal, for instance, does nothing contrary to its nature. The distinction lies in the religious character of the New Testament parable as contrasted with the secular character of the fable. While the parable exhibits the relations of man to God, the fable teaches lessons of worldly policy or natural morality and utility. " The parable is predominantly symbolic; the fable, for the most part, typical, and therefore presents its teaching only in the form of example, for which reason it chooses animals by preference, not as symbolic, but as typical figures; never symbolic in the sense in which the parable mostly is, because the higher invisible world, of which the parable sees and exhibits the symbol in the visible world of nature and man, lies far from it. Hence the parable can never work with fantastic figures like speaking animals, trees," etc. (Goebel, condensed).
The parable differs from the allegory in that there is in the latter " an interpenetration of the thing signified and the thing signifying; the qualities and properties of the first being attributed to the last," and the two being thus blended instead of being kept distinct and parallel. See, for example, the allegory of the Vine and the Branches (John 15) where Christ at once identifies himself with the figure' " I am the true vine." Thus the allegory, unlike the parable, carries its own interpretation with it.
Parable and proverb are often used interchangeably in the ;New Testament; the fundamental conception being, as we have seen, the same in both, the same Hebrew word representing both, and both being enigmatical. They differ rather in extent than in essence; the parable being a proverb expanded and carried into detail, and being necessarily figurative, which the proverb is not; though the range of the proverb is wider, since the parable expands only one particular case of a proverb. (See Trench, " Notes on the Parables," Introd.)
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A sower (
Rev., the sower. Generic, as representing a class.
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Vincent: Mat 13:3 - -- To sow ( τοῦ σπείρειν )
" According to Jewish authorities, there was twofold sowing, as the seed was either cast by the hand or by...
To sow (
" According to Jewish authorities, there was twofold sowing, as the seed was either cast by the hand or by means of cattle. In the latter case, a sack with holes was filled with corn and laid on the back of the animal, so that, as it moved onward, the seed was thickly scattered" (Edersheim, " Life and Times of Jesus" ).
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Vincent: Mat 13:4 - -- By the wayside
Dean Stanley, approaching the plain of Gennesareth, says: " A slight recess in the hillside, close upon the plain, disclosed at on...
By the wayside
Dean Stanley, approaching the plain of Gennesareth, says: " A slight recess in the hillside, close upon the plain, disclosed at once, in detail and with a conjunction which I remember nowhere else in Palestine, every feature of the great parable. There was the undulating cornfield descending to the water's edge. There was the trodden pathway running through the midst of it, with no fence or hedge to prevent the seed from falling here and there on either side of it or upon it; itself hard with the constant tramp of horse and mule and human feet. There was the 'good' rich soil which distinguishes the whole of that plain and its neighborhood from the bare hills elsewhere descending into the lake, and which, where there is no interruption, produces one vast mass of corn. There was the rocky ground of the hillside protruding here and there through the cornfields, as elsewhere through the grassy slopes. There were the large bushes of thorn - the
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Vincent: Mat 13:5 - -- Stony places
Not ground covered with loose stones, but a hard, rocky surface, covered with a thin layer of soil.
Stony places
Not ground covered with loose stones, but a hard, rocky surface, covered with a thin layer of soil.
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Vincent: Mat 13:7 - -- Sprang up
The seed, therefore, fell, not among standing thorns, but among those beneath the surface, ready to spring up.
Trench (" Parables" )...
Sprang up
The seed, therefore, fell, not among standing thorns, but among those beneath the surface, ready to spring up.
Trench (" Parables" ) cites a striking parallel from Ovid, describing the obstacles to the growth of the grain:
" Now the too ardent sun, vow furious showers,
With baleful stars and bitter winds combine
The crop to ravage; while the greedy fowl
Snatch the strewn seeds; and grass with stubborn roots,
And thorn and darnel plague the ripening grain."
Metamorphoses , v., 486.
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Vincent: Mat 13:8 - -- A hundred-fold
Mentioned as something extraordinary. Compare Gen 26:12. Herodotus (i., 93) says of Babylonia, " In grain it is so fruitful as to ...
A hundred-fold
Mentioned as something extraordinary. Compare Gen 26:12. Herodotus (i., 93) says of Babylonia, " In grain it is so fruitful as to yield commonly two-hundred-fold; and when the production is the greatest, even three-hundred-fold."
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Which constantly waited upon him, while he was on the sea coast.
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Wesley: Mat 13:3 - -- The word is here taken in its proper sense, for apt similes or comparisons. This way of speaking, extremely common in the eastern countries, drew and ...
The word is here taken in its proper sense, for apt similes or comparisons. This way of speaking, extremely common in the eastern countries, drew and fixed the attention of many, and occasioned the truths delivered to sink the deeper into humble and serious hearers. At the same time, by an awful mixture of justice and mercy, it hid them from the proud and careless. In this chapter our Lord delivers seven parables; directing the four former (as being of general concern) to all the people; the three latter to his disciples.
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Wesley: Mat 13:3 - -- How exquisitely proper is this parable to be an introduction to all the rest! In this our Lord answers a very obvious and a very important question. T...
How exquisitely proper is this parable to be an introduction to all the rest! In this our Lord answers a very obvious and a very important question. The same sower, Christ, and the same preachers sent by him, always sow the same seed: why has it not always the same effect? He that hath ears to hear, let him hear!
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Wesley: Mat 13:4 - -- It is observable, that our Lord points out the grand hinderances of our bearing fruit, in the same order as they occur. The first danger is, that the ...
It is observable, that our Lord points out the grand hinderances of our bearing fruit, in the same order as they occur. The first danger is, that the birds will devour the seed. If it escape this, there is then another danger, namely, lest it be scorched, and wither away. It is long after this that the thorns spring up and choke the good seed. A vast majority of those who hear the word of God, receive the seed as by the highway side. Of those who do not lose it by the birds, yet many receive it as on stony places. Many of them who receive it in a better soil, yet suffer the thorns to grow up, and choke it: so that few even of these endure to the end, and bear fruit unto perfection: yet in all these cases, it is not the will of God that hinders, but their own voluntary perverseness.
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Wesley: Mat 13:8 - -- Soft, not like that by the highway side; deep, not like the stony ground; purged, not full of thorns.
Soft, not like that by the highway side; deep, not like the stony ground; purged, not full of thorns.
The article in the received text lacks authority
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JFB: Mat 13:2 - -- How graphic this picture!--no doubt from the pen of an eye-witness, himself impressed with the scene. It was "the same day" on which the foregoing sol...
How graphic this picture!--no doubt from the pen of an eye-witness, himself impressed with the scene. It was "the same day" on which the foregoing solemn discourse was delivered, when His kindred thought Him "beside Himself" for His indifference to food and repose--that same day retiring to the seashore of Galilee; and there seating Himself, perhaps for coolness and rest, the crowds again flock around Him, and He is fain to push off from them, in the boat usually kept in readiness for Him; yet only to begin, without waiting to rest, a new course of teaching by parables to the eager multitudes that lined the shore. To the parables of our Lord there is nothing in all language to be compared, for simplicity, grace, fulness, and variety of spiritual teaching. They are adapted to all classes and stages of advancement, being understood by each according to the measure of his spiritual capacity.
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JFB: Mat 13:3 - -- These parables are SEVEN in number; and it is not a little remarkable that while this is the sacred number, the first FOUR of them were spoken to the ...
These parables are SEVEN in number; and it is not a little remarkable that while this is the sacred number, the first FOUR of them were spoken to the mixed multitude, while the remaining THREE were spoken to the Twelve in private--these divisions, four and three, being themselves notable in the symbolical arithmetic of Scripture. Another thing remarkable in the structure of these parables is, that while the first of the Seven--that of the Sower--is of the nature of an Introduction to the whole, the remaining Six consist of three pairs--the Second and Seventh, the Third and Fourth, and the Fifth and Sixth, corresponding to each other; each pair setting forth the same general truths, but with a certain diversity of aspect. All this can hardly be accidental.
First Parable: THE SOWER (Mat 13:3-9, Mat 13:18-23).
This parable may be entitled, THE EFFECT OF THE WORD DEPENDENT ON THE STATE OF THE HEART. For the exposition of this parable, see on Mar 4:1-9, Mar 4:14-20.
Reason for Teaching in Parables (Mat 13:10-17).
Clarke: Mat 13:1 - -- The same day - Our Lord scarcely ever appears to take any rest: he is incessant in his labors, and instant in season and out of season; and in this ...
The same day - Our Lord scarcely ever appears to take any rest: he is incessant in his labors, and instant in season and out of season; and in this he has left all his successors in the ministry an example, that they should follow his steps: for he who wishes to save souls will find few opportunities to rest. As Satan is going about as a roaring lion seeking whom he may devour, the messenger of God should imitate his diligence, that he may counteract his work. The gospels are journals of our Lord’ s life
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Clarke: Mat 13:1 - -- Sat by the sea side - The sea of Galilee, on the borders of which the city of Capernaum was situated.
Sat by the sea side - The sea of Galilee, on the borders of which the city of Capernaum was situated.
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Clarke: Mat 13:2 - -- Into a ship - Το πλοιον, The vessel or boat. Mr. Wakefield supposes (which is very likely) that a particular vessel is uniformly specified,...
Into a ship -
The thought of pious Quesnel on this verse should not be neglected. We see here a representation of the Church, which consists of the people united to their pastors. These, being more exposed to violent tossings and storms, are, as it were, in a ship, while those continue at ease on the shore.
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Clarke: Mat 13:3 - -- He spake many things unto them in parables - Parable, from παρα, near, and βαλλω, I cast, or put. A comparison or similitude, in which on...
He spake many things unto them in parables - Parable, from
It is said in the tract Sotah, chap. 9. "From the time that Rabbi Meri died, those that spake in parables ceased."Not that this figure of rhetoric perished in the nation from that time; but because he surpassed all others in these flowers, as the gloss there from the tract Sanhedrin speaks. "A third part of his discourses was tradition; a third part allegory; and a third part parable."The Jewish books every where abound with these figures, the nation inclining by a kind of natural genius to this kind of rhetoric. Their very religion might be called parabolical, folded up within the covering of ceremonies; and their oratory in their sermons was like to it. But is it not indeed a wonder, that they who were so much given to and delighted in parables, and so dexterous in unfolding them, should stick in the outward shell of ceremonies, and should not have brought out the parabolical and spiritual sense of them? Our Savior, who always spoke with the common people, uses the same kind of speech, and very often the same preface which they used, To what is it likened? See Lightfoot in loco. Though we find the basis of many of our Lord’ s parables in the Jewish writings, yet not one of them comes through his hands without being astonishingly improved. In this respect also, Surely never man spoke like this man
Under the parable of the sower, our Lord intimates
1. That of all the multitudes then attending his ministry, few would bring forth fruit to perfection. An
2. That this would be a general case in preaching the Gospel among men.
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Clarke: Mat 13:4 - -- Some seeds fell by the way side - The hard beaten path, where no plough had broken up the ground.
Some seeds fell by the way side - The hard beaten path, where no plough had broken up the ground.
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Clarke: Mat 13:5 - -- Stony places - Where there was a thin surface of earth, and a rock at the bottom.
Stony places - Where there was a thin surface of earth, and a rock at the bottom.
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Clarke: Mat 13:7 - -- Among thorns - Where the earth was ploughed up, but the brambles and weeds had not been cleared away.
Among thorns - Where the earth was ploughed up, but the brambles and weeds had not been cleared away.
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Clarke: Mat 13:8 - -- Good ground - Where the earth was deep, the field well ploughed, and the brambles and weeds all removed. See more on Mat 13:19 (note), etc., and see...
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Clarke: Mat 13:8 - -- Some a hundred-fold - For the elucidation of this text, I beg leave to introduce the following experiment. In 1816 I sowed, for a third crop, a fiel...
Some a hundred-fold - For the elucidation of this text, I beg leave to introduce the following experiment. In 1816 I sowed, for a third crop, a field with oats, at Millbrook, in Lancashire; the grains weighed, on an average, 3/4 of a grain each. One grain produced three stalks with three ears: the largest had 68 grains in it, the second 26, and the third 25
Whole number of grains 119, which together weighed 82 grs
The root separately, after washing and drying, weighed 13 grs
The stalks and remaining leaves (for many had perished in the wet season) 630 grs
Weight of the whole produce of one grain of oats 726 grs. which was 725 times and one quarter more than the original weight
The power of grain to multiply itself, even in the same year, is a subject as much of curiosity and astonishment as of importance and general utility. For the farther elucidation of this text, I shall give the following example from a practice in agriculture, or rural economy, which is termed filtering
On the 2nd of June, 1766, Mr. C. Miller, of Cambridge, sowed some grains of the common, red wheat; and on the 8th of August a single plant was taken up, and separated into 18 parts, and each planted separately: these plants having pushed out several side shoots, about the middle of September some of them were taken up and divided; and the rest between that time and October. This second division produced 67 plants. These plants remained through the winter, and another division of them, made between the middle of March and the 12th of April, produced 500 plants. They were divided no farther, but permitted to remain in the field. These plants were in general stronger than any of the wheat in the field. Some of them produced upwards of 100 ears from a single root and many of the ears measured seven inches in length, and contained between sixty and seventy grains. The whole number of ears produced from the single plant was 21,109, which yielded three pecks and three-quarters of clear corn, weighing 47lbs. 7oz., and, from a calculation made by counting the grains in an ounce, the whole number of grains was about 576,840. Mr. Miller thinks that, had he made a second division in the spring, the number of plants would have amounted to 2000. Who can help admiring the wisdom and providence of God in this single grain of corn! He has, in some sort, impressed on it an idea of his own infinity; and an idea which, like the subject to which it refers, confounds our imagination and reason. How infinitely great is God, even in his minor works.
Calvin -> Mat 13:2
Calvin: Mat 13:2 - -- Mat 13:2.And great multitudes were gathered together to him It is not without good reason that the Evangelists begin with informing us that, a vast mu...
Mat 13:2.And great multitudes were gathered together to him It is not without good reason that the Evangelists begin with informing us that, a vast multitude had assembled, and that when Christ beheld them, he was led to compare his doctrine to seed That multitude had been collected from various places: all were held in suspense; all were alike eager to hear, but not equally desirous to receive instruction. The design of the parable was to inform them, that the seed of doctrine, which is scattered far and wide, is not everywhere productive; because it does not always find a fertile and well cultivated soil. Christ declared that he was there in the capacity of a husbandman, who was going out to sow seed, but that many of his hearers resembled an uncultivated and parched soil, while others resembled a thorny soil; so that the labor and the very seed were thrown away. I forbear to make any farther inquiry into the meaning of the parable, till we come to the explanation of it; which, as we shall find, is shortly afterwards given by our Lord. It may only be necessary, for the present, to remind the reader, that if those who ran from distant places to Christ, like hungry persons, are compared to an unproductive and barren soil, we need not wonder if, in our own day, the Gospel does not yield fruit in many, of whom some are lazy and sluggish, others hear with indifference, and others are scarcely drawn even to hear.
Defender: Mat 13:3 - -- This is the first mention of "parables" in the New Testament. This parable of the sower is preeminently important among all of Jesus' parables. In the...
This is the first mention of "parables" in the New Testament. This parable of the sower is preeminently important among all of Jesus' parables. In the parallel account in Mark, He made this clear: "Know ye not this parable? and how then will ye know all parables?" (Mar 4:13)."
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Defender: Mat 13:4 - -- The "seeds" which are being sown are the Word of God (Luk 8:11), and the "field" in which they are to be sown is the whole world (Mat 13:38).
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Defender: Mat 13:4 - -- The parallel account in Luke says these seeds on the wayside were "trodden down" (Luk 8:5).
The parallel account in Luke says these seeds on the wayside were "trodden down" (Luk 8:5).
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Defender: Mat 13:4 - -- These birds of the air, eating up the seed before it can take root, represent the minions of "the wicked one" (Mat 13:19), whether evil spirits or ung...
These birds of the air, eating up the seed before it can take root, represent the minions of "the wicked one" (Mat 13:19), whether evil spirits or ungodly men, doing all they can to destroy the message of God's Word."
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Defender: Mat 13:5 - -- Luk 8:6 says that this stony ground "lacked moisture." The sown seed, which is the Word of God, must also be watered by the work of other believers (1...
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Defender: Mat 13:6 - -- Although the sower was right to scatter seed everywhere, it would have been more effective if he had first removed the stones (stumbling-stones inhibi...
Although the sower was right to scatter seed everywhere, it would have been more effective if he had first removed the stones (stumbling-stones inhibiting faith in the Word), then also watered the ground. Without this preparation and maintenance, even though the seed sprang up "forthwith," it did not last. It is sadly true that instant conversions, more often than not, are superficial and fade away in the heat of persecution, or even mere peer pressure."
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Defender: Mat 13:8 - -- Interestingly, the very first reference in the Bible to seed-sowing speaks of Isaac's seed as bringing forth in the very year that he sowed "an hundre...
Interestingly, the very first reference in the Bible to seed-sowing speaks of Isaac's seed as bringing forth in the very year that he sowed "an hundredfold: and the Lord blessed him" (Gen 26:12). The promise of spiritual fruit from spiritual seed is found throughout the Bible (Ecc 11:1, Ecc 11:4-6; Isa 55:10, Isa 55:11; Joh 4:37, Joh 4:38; 1Co 3:6-8).
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Defender: Mat 13:8 - -- This suggested division of fruit-bearing indicates that seed-sowers who are careful to sow on good ground (in hearts properly prepared to receive the ...
This suggested division of fruit-bearing indicates that seed-sowers who are careful to sow on good ground (in hearts properly prepared to receive the Word) can be categorized in three groups. There are other examples of this in Scripture. In His parable of the vine, Jesus spoke of bearing "fruit," "more fruit" and "much fruit" (Joh 15:2, Joh 15:5). He indicated, too, that the "much fruit" category is for those who "die" to this world (Joh 12:24, Joh 12:25)."
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TSK: Mat 13:2 - -- great : Mat 4:25, Mat 15:30; Gen 49:10; Luk 8:4-8
so : Mar 4:1; Luk 5:3
a ship : Το [Strong’ s G3588] πλοιον [Strong’ s G4143]...
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TSK: Mat 13:3 - -- in : Mat 13:10-13, Mat 13:34, Mat 13:35, Mat 13:53, Mat 22:1, Mat 24:32; Jdg 9:8-20; 2Sa 12:1-7; Psa 49:4, Psa 78:2; Isa 5:1-7; Eze 17:2, Eze 20:49, E...
in : Mat 13:10-13, Mat 13:34, Mat 13:35, Mat 13:53, Mat 22:1, Mat 24:32; Jdg 9:8-20; 2Sa 12:1-7; Psa 49:4, Psa 78:2; Isa 5:1-7; Eze 17:2, Eze 20:49, Eze 24:3-14; Mic 2:4; Hab 2:6; Mar 3:23; Mar 4:2, Mar 4:13, Mar 4:33, Mar 12:1, Mar 12:12; Luk 8:10, Luk 12:41, Luk 15:3-7; Joh 16:25 *marg.
parables : A parable,
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TSK: Mat 13:6 - -- when : Mat 13:21; Isa 49:10; Jam 1:11, Jam 1:12; Rev 7:16
because : Mat 7:26, Mat 7:27; Luk 8:13; Eph 3:17; Col 1:23, Col 2:7
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Mat 13:1-2; Mat 13:3-9
Barnes: Mat 13:1-2 - -- The sea-side - This was the Sea of Tiberias. The multitude stood on the shore near to him, so that he could be easily heard. He went into a shi...
The sea-side - This was the Sea of Tiberias. The multitude stood on the shore near to him, so that he could be easily heard. He went into a ship - that is, a boat; and sat down to address them. Few spectacles could be more interesting than a vast crowd on the hanks of a smooth and tranquil sea - an emblem of his instructions - and the Son of God addressing them on the great interests of eternity.
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Barnes: Mat 13:3-9 - -- In parables - The word "parable"is derived from a Greek word signifying "to compare together,"and denotes a similitude taken from a natural obj...
In parables - The word "parable"is derived from a Greek word signifying "to compare together,"and denotes a similitude taken from a natural object to illustrate a spiritual or moral subject. It is a narrative of some fictitious or real event, in order to illustrate more clearly some truth that the speaker wished to communicate. In early ages it was much used. Pagan writers, as Aesop, often employed it. In the time of Christ it was in common use. The prophets had used it, and Christ employed it often in teaching his disciples. It is not necessary to suppose that the narratives were strictly true. The main thing - "the inculcation of spiritual truth"- was gained equally, whether it was true or was only a supposed case. Nor was there any dishonesty in this. It was well understood no person was deceived. The speaker was not "understood"to affirm the thing "literally narrated,"but only to fix the attention more firmly on the moral truth that he presented. The "design"of speaking in parables was the following:
1. To convey truth in a more interesting manner to the mind, adding to the truth conveyed the beauty of a lovely image or narrative.
2. To teach spiritual truth so as to arrest the attention of ignorant people, making an appeal to them through the "senses."
3. To convey some offensive truth, some pointed personal rebuke. in such a way as to bring it "home"to the conscience. Of this kind was the parable which Nathan delivered to David 2Sa 12:1-7, and many of our Saviour’ s parables addressed to the Jews.
4. To "conceal"from one part of his audience truths which he intended others should understand. Thus Christ often, by this means, delivered truths to his disciples in the presence of the Jews, which he well knew the Jews would not understand; truths pertaining to them particularly, and which he was under no obligations to explain to the Jews. See Mar 4:33; Mat 13:13-16.
Our Saviour’ s parables are distinguished above all others for clearness, purity, chasteness, importance of instruction, and simplicity. They are taken mostly from the affairs of common life, and intelligible, therefore, to all people. They contain much of "himself"- his doctrine, life, design in coming, and claims, and are therefore of importance to all people; and they are told in a style of simplicity intelligible to the child, yet instructive to people of every rank and age. In his parables, as in all his instructions, he excelled all people in the purity, importance, and sublimity of his doctrine.
A sower went forth to sow - The image here is taken from an employment known to all people, and therefore intelligible to all.
Nor can there be a more striking illustration of preaching the gospel than placing the seed in the ground, to spring up hereafter and bear fruit.
Sower - One who sows or scatters seed - a farmer. It is not improbable that one was near the Saviour when he spoke this parable.
Some seeds fell by the way-side - That is, the hard "path"or headland, which the plow had not touched, and where there was no opportunity for it to sink into the earth.
Stony places - Where there was little earth, but where it was hard and rocky, so that the roots could not strike down into the earth for sufficient moisture to support the plant.
When the sun became hot they of course withered away. They sprang up the sooner because there was little earth to cover them.
Forthwith - Immediately. Not that they sprouted and grew any quicker or faster than the others, but they were not so long in reaching the surface. Having little root, they soon withered away.
Among thorns - That is, in a part of the field where the thorns and shrubs had been imperfectly cleared away and not destroyed.
They grew with the grain, crowded it, shaded it, exhausted the earth, and thus choked it.
Into good ground - The fertile and rich soil.
In sowing, by far the largest proportion of seed will fall into the good soil; but Christ did not intend to teach that these proportions would be exactly the same among those who heard the gospel. Parables are designed to teach some "general"truth, and the circumstances should not be pressed too much in explaining them.
An hundred-fold ... - That is, a hundred, sixty, or thirty "grains"for each one that was sowed an increase by no means uncommon. Some grains of wheat will produce twelve or fifteen hundred grains. The usual proportion on a field sown, however, is not more than twenty, fifty, or sixty bushels for one.
Who hath ears ... - This is a proverbial expression, implying that it was every man’ s duty to pay attention to what was spoken, Mat 11:15.
Poole: Mat 13:1 - -- Mat 13:1-9 The parable of the sower.
Mat 13:10-17 Why Christ taught in parables.
Mat 13:18-23 The exposition of the parable of the sower.
Mat 13:...
Mat 13:1-9 The parable of the sower.
Mat 13:10-17 Why Christ taught in parables.
Mat 13:18-23 The exposition of the parable of the sower.
Mat 13:24-30 The parable of the tares,
Mat 13:31,32 of the grain of mustard seed,
Mat 13:33-35 of the leaven.
Mat 13:36-43 The parable of the tares expounded.
Mat 13:44 The parable of the hidden treasure,
Mat 13:45,46 of one pearl of great price,
Mat 13:47-52 of a net cast into the sea,
Mat 13:53-58 Christ’ s countrymen are offended in him.
See Poole on "Mat 13:3" .
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Poole: Mat 13:1-3 - -- Ver. 1-3. Mark saith, Mar 4:1 , He began again to teach by the seaside: and there was gathered unto him a great multitude, so that he entered into a...
Ver. 1-3. Mark saith, Mar 4:1 , He began again to teach by the seaside: and there was gathered unto him a great multitude, so that he entered into a ship, and sat in the sea; and the whole multitude was by the sea on the land . Luke, Luk 8:4 , saith no more than, when much people were gathered together, and were come to him out of every city, he spake by a parable . Two evangelists agree that this sermon of our Saviour’ s was preached out of a ship, to multitudes that stood on the shore. The occasion of his going into a ship was the throng of people, both for his own and their convenience. It is here said that he sat; this, we observed before, was the usual gesture of the teacher amongst the Jews. This sermon is said to have been made the same day, which some observe in historical narrations is to be taken strictly, and lets us know the assiduity of Christ in his work.
And he spake many things unto them in parables: the term parable often in Scripture signifies dark sayings, or proverbial speeches, Eze 17:2 20:49 . But in the Gospels it generally hath another sense, and signifies similitudes or comparisons of things. This being the first time we have met with the term, and the first formed and perfect parable we have met with, because we shall meet with the term often hereafter, with many formed parables, I shall here give some notes which may be not only of use to understand the following parables we shall meet with in this chapter, but in the following part of the Gospel.
1. A parable, in the gospel sense of the term, signifieth a similitude, taken from the ordinary actions of men, and made use of to inform us in one or more points of spiritual doctrines.
2. That it is not necessary to a parable that the matter contained in it should be true in matter of fact; for it is not brought to inform us in a matter of fact, but in some spiritual truth, to which it bears some proportion. This we see in Jotham’ s parable of the trees going to choose themselves a king, &c.
3. That it is not necessary that all the actions of men mentioned in a parable should be morally just and honest. The actions of the unjust steward, Luk 16:1 , &c., were not so.
4. That, for the right understanding of a parable, our great care must be to consider the main scope of it, whither the story tends, and what our Saviour designed principally by the parable to instruct and teach the people by that discourse.
5. That the main scope of the parable is to be learned, either from our Saviour’ s general or more particular explication of it, either from the proparabola , or preface to it, or from the epiparabola , or the conclusion of it.
6. It is not to be expected that all particular actions represented in a parable should be answered by something in the explication of it.
7. Lastly, though the scope of the parable be the main thing we are to attend unto, and in which it doth instruct us, yet it may collaterally inform us in several things besides that point which is in it chiefly attended.
It is said that our Saviour spake many things to the multitude in parables, covering truths under similitudes fetched from such ordinary actions as men did or might do. This was a very ancient way of instruction, by fables or parables, as we may learn by Jotham’ s parable, Jud 9:7,8 , &c. It is now much out of use with us, but amongst the Jews was very ordinary; so as our Saviour spake to them in their own dialect. It had a double advantage upon their hearers:
1. Upon their memory, we being very apt to remember stories.
2. Upon their minds, to put them upon studying the meaning of what they heard so delivered; and also upon their affections, similitudes contributing much to excite affection.
But withal it had this disadvantage, that he who so taught was not understood of a great part of his auditory.
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Poole: Mat 13:4-9 - -- Ver. 4-9. There is some difference in the terms used by Mark and Luke in their relations of this parable, Mar 4:3-8 , and Luk 8:4-8 ; but none that a...
Ver. 4-9. There is some difference in the terms used by Mark and Luke in their relations of this parable, Mar 4:3-8 , and Luk 8:4-8 ; but none that are material, nor much to be considered by us, being they are in the parable. I shall when I come to it more exactly consider what differences there are betwixt the evangelists in the terms they use in the explication which our Saviour giveth us of the parable; which he did not give before the multitude, but when he was alone, saith Mark, Mar 4:10 . That which our Saviour spoke to the whole multitude was this. Now whether there were indeed any such sower, yea or no, is not at all material: our Saviour’ s design was not to inform them in a matter of fact, but of the different success of the preaching of the word; and for this purpose he brought this similitude, leaving the generality of the hearers to study out his meaning, concluding,
He that hath ears to hear, let him hear which is an epiphonema, or conclusion of a speech, we met with before, and spake something to.
Lightfoot: Mat 13:2 - -- And great multitudes were gathered together unto him, so that he went into a ship, and sat; and the whole multitude stood on the shore. &nbs...
And great multitudes were gathered together unto him, so that he went into a ship, and sat; and the whole multitude stood on the shore.  
[So that he sat, and the whole multitude stood.] So was the manner of the nation, that the masters when they read their lectures sat; and the scholars stood; which honorary custom continued to the death of Gamaliel the Elder; and then so far ceased, that the scholars sat when their masters sat. Hence is that passage: "From that time that old Rabban Gamaliel died, the honour of the law perished, and purity and Pharisaism died." Where the Gloss, from Megillah; writes us; "Before his death health was in the world, and they learned the law standing; but when he was dead sickness came down into the world, and they were compelled to learn the law sitting."
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Lightfoot: Mat 13:3 - -- And he spake many things unto them in parables, saying, Behold, a sower went forth to sow.  [In parables.] I. No figure of Jewish rhet...
And he spake many things unto them in parables, saying, Behold, a sower went forth to sow.  
[In parables.] I. No figure of Jewish rhetoric was more familiarly used than that of parables; which perhaps, creeping in from thence, among the heathen ended in fables. It is said, in the place of the Talmud just now cited, From the time that R. Meir died, those that spake in parables ceased; not that that figure of rhetoric perished in the nation from that time, but because he surpassed all others in these flowers; as the Gloss there from the tract Sanhedrim speaks; A third part [of his discourses or sermons] was tradition, a third part allegory, and a third part parable. The Jewish books abound everywhere with these figures, the nation inclining by a kind of natural genius to this kind of rhetoric. One might not amiss call their religion Parabolical; folded up within the coverings of ceremonies; and their oratory in their sermons was like to it. But it is a wonder indeed, that they who were so given to and delighted in parables; and so dextrous in unfolding them, should stick in the outward shell of ceremonies, and should not have fetched out the parabolical and spiritual sense of them; neither should he be able to fetch them out.  
II. Our Saviour (who always and everywhere spake with the vulgar) useth the same kind of speech, and very often the same preface, as they did in their parables. To what is it likened; etc. But in him, thus speaking, one may both acknowledge the Divine justice, who speaks darkly to them that despise the light; and his Divine wisdom likewise, who so speaks to them that see, and yet see not, that they may see the shell and not see the kernel.
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Lightfoot: Mat 13:4 - -- And when he sowed, some seeds fell by the way side, and the fowls came and devoured them up:  [Some fell by the way side, etc.] concer...
And when he sowed, some seeds fell by the way side, and the fowls came and devoured them up:  
[Some fell by the way side, etc.] concerning the husbandry of the Jews, and their manner of sowing, we meet with various passages in the tracts Peah, Demai, Kilaim, Sheviith; we shall only touch upon those things which the words of the text under our hands do readily remind us of.  
There were ways and paths as well common as more private along the sown fields; see Mat 12:1. Hence in the tract Peah; where they dispute what those things are which divide a field so that it owes a double corner to the poor; thus it is determined, "These things divide: a river, an aqueduct, a private way, a common way, a common path, and a private path," etc. See the place and the Gloss.
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Lightfoot: Mat 13:5 - -- Some fell upon stony places, where they had not much earth: and forthwith they sprung up, because they had no deepness of earth:  [Some ...
Some fell upon stony places, where they had not much earth: and forthwith they sprung up, because they had no deepness of earth:  
[Some fell among stony places.] Discourse is had concerning some laws of the Kilaim (or, of the seeds of different kinds ), and of the seventh year: where, among other things, we meet with these words; "R. Simeon Ben Lachish saith that he is freed [from those laws] who sows his seed by the sea, upon rocks, shelves, and rocky places." These words are spoken according to the reason and nature of the land of Israel, which was very rocky; and yet those places that were so were not altogether unfit for tillage.
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Lightfoot: Mat 13:7 - -- And some fell among thorns; and the thorns sprung up, and choked them:  [Others fell among thorns.] Here the distinction comes into my m...
And some fell among thorns; and the thorns sprung up, and choked them:  
[Others fell among thorns.] Here the distinction comes into my mind of a white field; that is, which is all sown; and of a woody field; that is, in which trees and bushes grow here and there: concerning which see the tract Sheviith. So there is very frequent mention in the Talmudists of beds; in fields and vineyards, which speaks the same thing. And of baldness in a field; that is, when some places are left not sown, and some places lying between are.
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Lightfoot: Mat 13:8 - -- But other fell into good ground, and brought forth fruit, some an hundredfold, some sixtyfold, some thirtyfold.  [And brought forth fru...
But other fell into good ground, and brought forth fruit, some an hundredfold, some sixtyfold, some thirtyfold.  
[And brought forth fruit, some a hundred, etc. ] these words are spoken according to the fruitfulness of the land of Israel; concerning which the Talmudists speak much, and hyperbolically enough: which nevertheless they confess to be turned long since into miserable barrenness; but are dim-sighted as to the true cause of it.  
They treat of this matter, and various stories are produced, which you may see: we will only mention these two: --  
"R. Jochanan said, The worst fruit which we eat in our youth excelled the best which we now eat in our old age: for in his days the world was changed."  
"R. Chaijah Bar Ba said The Arbelite bushel formerly yielded a bushel of flour, a bushel of meal, a bushel of bran, and a bushel of coarse bran, and a bushel of coarser bran yet, and a bushel of the coarsest bran also: but now one bushel scarcely comes from one bushel."
Haydock: Mat 13:1 - -- On the same day Jesus left the house, in which he had performed the miracle, and delivered the preceding discourse, and sat himself down on the shore...
On the same day Jesus left the house, in which he had performed the miracle, and delivered the preceding discourse, and sat himself down on the shore of the sea of Galilee, were multitudes crowded unto him.
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Haydock: Mat 13:3 - -- To them he spoke many things, from a ship, in parables; probably many more than are here recorded. By familiar and well-known objects, Jesus Christ w...
To them he spoke many things, from a ship, in parables; probably many more than are here recorded. By familiar and well-known objects, Jesus Christ would thus convey more pleasingly his divine instructions, and teach them to spiritualize their daily labours, and by natural things, which meet the senses, lead them to knowledge of things divine, which we cannot naturally comprehend. (Haydock) ---
Several reasons may be assigned why our Lord made use of parables: 1st. The lively imagination of the Orientals made them relish these figurative expressions, which awaken the attention, and exercise the understanding. 2d. The indisposition of his hearers made him frequently veil his instructions under similitudes or parables; but in private, he expounded the meaning to his disciples, who were better disposed, and was ever ready to give every necessary and satisfactory explanation to as many as sincerely wished for it. ---
A third motive, given by St. Matthew, was the accomplishment of the prophecies; for one of the characteristics of the Messias was, that he would express himself in this parabolical manner; and Jesus Christ was pleased that the most minute circumstances should be fulfilled in his person, in order that the resemblance between him and the ancient prophets, in the mode of instructing, might induce the Jews to consider him as the great prophet, foretold by Moses. There are few Christians that do not dwell with delight and improvement on our Lord's parables. Their imagination, warmed with the singular beauty of the imagery, more easily retains them; and the greatest geniuses have ever esteemed them as very superior and striking lessons of morality and religion. ---
In his sermon on the mount, Jesus Christ does not make use of parables to convey his instructions to the Jews, for then his auditors were composed of a mixed multitude, and the major part of them illiterate people; but here, on the contrary, they are the Scribes and Pharisees, the doctors of the law. (St. John Chrysostom) ---
Jesus Christ speaks sometimes in plain, and sometimes in obscure terms, that, by what they understand, they may be led to the search of what they do not understand. (St. Jerome)
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Haydock: Mat 13:4 - -- And whilst he soweth. St. Matthew and St. Mark subjoin the following parables to what goes before, but St. Luke places the parable of the sower im...
And whilst he soweth. St. Matthew and St. Mark subjoin the following parables to what goes before, but St. Luke places the parable of the sower immediately after the second journey through Galilee, which he anticipates. Jesus Christ successively proposed four parables to the people, and then dismissed them; and being now retired with his disciples, he unfolded to them the meaning of the parables when in the house. (ver. 36) St. Matthew, however, interrupts the course of the parables, and after the first, anticipates the request of the disciples to have it explained; but from St. Mark, we learn that this did not take place till Christ was alone in the house. Of the eight parables, all spoken by Jesus on the same day, the first five were addressed to the people assembled on the sea-shore, the other three were added by him when alone with the apostles in the house, and are in some measure explanations of the former. In the first, we see the different success of the word of God from the different dispositions of the hearers. And as we find that only one-fourth part of the seed produced fruit, we may thence infer how many and great are the obstacles in the way of salvation, and how few will be the number of the elect. (Haydock)
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Haydock: Mat 13:5 - -- Had no deepness of earth; and therefore the seed, not able to shoot downwards, shot upwards, and for want of necessary moisture and nutriment, was bu...
Had no deepness of earth; and therefore the seed, not able to shoot downwards, shot upwards, and for want of necessary moisture and nutriment, was burned by the scorching heat of the sun.
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Haydock: Mat 13:8 - -- Some a hundred-fold. This difference of fruits is the difference of merit here, and of the rewards hereafter, according to the diversity of stat...
Some a hundred-fold. This difference of fruits is the difference of merit here, and of the rewards hereafter, according to the diversity of states, &c. St. Augustine, in his work, ( de Virginitate, chap. xliv, and seq. ) saith, that the hundred-fold agreeth with professed virgins; the sixty-fold with religious widows; the thirty-fold with married persons. This old heretic, Jovinian, and many of modern date, deny, affirming that there is no difference of merits or rewards. (St. Jerome, lib. ii. adv. Jovin. St. Ambrose, ep. lxxxii. St. Augustine, ep. lxxxii.) (Bristow)
Gill: Mat 13:1 - -- The same day Jesus went out of the house,.... Where he had been preaching, and working miracles: where this house was, is not certain; it seems to hav...
The same day Jesus went out of the house,.... Where he had been preaching, and working miracles: where this house was, is not certain; it seems to have been in one of the cities of Galilee, probably Capernaum, since that was by the sea coast: the reason of his going out of the house was, either to converse with his mother and brethren, as they desired; or to withdraw himself from company, and take some refreshment by the sea side; or because it would not hold the people, and therefore he quitted it for a more convenient place. The time he went out of it, was the same day he had cast the devil out of the man blind and dumb, and had delivered himself so freely concerning the Scribes and Pharisees, who had blasphemously ascribed that miracle to the assistance of Satan; and the same day his mother and brethren came to see him, and speak to him.
And sat by the sea side; either as weary, and for his refreshment, or in order to preach to the people; for, Mark says, "he began again to teach by the sea side", Mar 4:1. This was the sea of Galilee, sometimes called the sea of Tiberias.
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Gill: Mat 13:2 - -- And great multitudes were gathered unto him,.... Some on one account, and some on another; some to see his person, others his miracles; some healing f...
And great multitudes were gathered unto him,.... Some on one account, and some on another; some to see his person, others his miracles; some healing for their bodies, and others for their souls; some for the loaves, and others to hear him preach; and of these there were several sorts, as the following parable shows.
So that he went into a ship: both for his own advantage, that he might not be crowded, and pressed by the people, and have more room, and a freer air to speak in, and for theirs, that they might both see and hear him better.
And sat, and the whole multitude stood on the shore; as was the then custom of the Jewish doctors and hearers, the one to sit, and the other to stand. See Gill on Mat 5:1. Christ sat upon the deck of the ship; or perhaps this ship was no other than an open boat, which was put to sea, some little distance from the shore; upon which the people stood in great numbers, with much convenience and attention.
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Gill: Mat 13:3 - -- And he spake many things unto them in parables,.... For the parables of the sower, and the different sorts of ground the seed fell in, of the wheat an...
And he spake many things unto them in parables,.... For the parables of the sower, and the different sorts of ground the seed fell in, of the wheat and tares, of the grain of mustard seed, of the leaven in three measures of meal, of the treasure hid in a field, of the pearl of great price, of the net cast into the sea, and of the householder, were all delivered at this time. This way of speaking by parables was much in use among the eastern nations, and particularly the Jews. R. Meir was very famous among them for this way of teaching: they say a,
"that when R. Meir died,
The commentators b on this passage say,
"that he preached a third part tradition, and a third part mystical discourse,
which method of discoursing was judged both pleasant and profitable, and what served to raise the attention of the hearer, and to fix what was delivered the more firmly in their minds: what was our Lord's reason for using them, may be seen in Mat 13:13. He begins with the parable of the sower. The design of which is to set forth the nature of the word of God, the work and business of the ministers of it, the different success of the preaching of it, and the fruitfulness of it; and to show when it is truly received, and the various degrees of fruit it produces; that the efficacy of it depends on the grace of God, which makes the heart good, and fit to receive it; and how few they be which hear the word to any spiritual advantage and benefit; and how far persons may go in hearing, and yet fall short of the grace of God; and therefore no dependence is to be had on the external hearing of the word.
Behold, a sower went forth to sow; Luke adds, "his seed"; as does also Munster's Hebrew Gospel here; and Mark introduces the parable thus, "hearken, behold!" it being a matter of great importance and concern, which is expressed by this parable, it deserves the most diligent attention. By "the sower" is meant "the son of man", as may be learnt from the explanation of another parable, Mat 13:37 which is Jesus Christ himself, who is often so called on account of his human nature; and may the rather be thought to be intended here, since the seed he sowed is called "his seed"; meaning the Gospel, of which he is the author, publisher, sum and substance; and since he is, by way of eminency, called
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Gill: Mat 13:4 - -- And when he sowed,.... Or, "as he sowed", as the other evangelists; that is, "whilst he was sowing",
some seeds fell; either out of his hand, or ou...
And when he sowed,.... Or, "as he sowed", as the other evangelists; that is, "whilst he was sowing",
some seeds fell; either out of his hand, or out of the cart drawn by oxen; hence the c Talmudists distinguish between
"in some places they sow the grain with the hand; and in other places they put the seed on a cart full of holes, and oxen draw the cart on the ploughed land, and it falls upon it.''
By the wayside; by the common road, or private paths, which led through corn fields, in which Christ and his disciples walked, Mat 12:1 and which being beaten and trodden hard, the seed must lie open on it, and so be liable to be trampled upon by men, or devoured by the fowls of the air; and designs such hearers as are careless, negligent, and inattentive, who hear without understanding, judgment, and affection; see Mat 13:19
and the fowls came and devoured them; the other evangelists say, "the fowls of the air"; and so the Vulgate Latin, and Munster's Hebrew Gospel, and some copies; and mean the devils; so called, because their habitation is in the air; hence they are said to be "the power of the air": and because of their ravenous and devouring nature, their swiftness to do mischief, and their flocking in multitudes, where the word is preached, to hinder its usefulness, as fowls do, where seed is sowing. Satan, and his principalities, and powers, rove about in the air, come down on earth, and seek whom they may devour, and often mix themselves in religious assemblies, to do what mischief they can; see Job 1:6.
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Gill: Mat 13:5 - -- Some fell upon stony places,.... Such a place as the Jews call חולסית, a barren, stony place, a place from whence, they say, they take stones, a...
Some fell upon stony places,.... Such a place as the Jews call
Where they had not much earth, to cover them and take root in: this is expressive of such persons who have slight convictions of sin, and awakenings of the natural conscience; some little, light, and speculative notions of the word, in the understanding and judgment; some flashes of natural affection for it, and outward expressions of delight and pleasure in it; some show of grace, and a form of godliness, but no real heart work.
And forthwith they sprung up, because they had no deepness of earth; to strike their roots downwards: and through the reflection of the heat, upon the rocks and stones, they quickly broke through the thin surface of the earth over them, and appeared above ground before the usual time of the springing up of seed: which may not only denote the immediate reception of the word by these hearers, and their quick assent to it; but their sudden and hasty profession of it, without taking due time to consider the nature and importance thereof; and the seeming cheerfulness in which they did both receive and profess it; though it was only outward and hypocritical, and more on account of the manner of preaching it, than the word itself, and through a selfish principle in them; and did not arise from any real experience of the power of it on their souls, or true spiritual pleasure in it: nor could it be otherwise, since their stony hearts were not taken away, nor hearts of flesh given them; wherefore the word had no place in them, and made no real impression on them; they remained dead in trespasses and sins; the word was not the savour of life unto life unto them, or the Spirit that giveth life; they did not become living and lively stones; they continued as insensible as ever of their state and condition by nature, of the exceeding sinfulness of sin, of the danger they were in, and of their need of Christ, and salvation by him; they were as hard, and obdurate, and as inflexible, as ever, without any real contrition for sin, or meltings of soul through the influence of the love and grace of God; and as backward as ever to submit to the righteousness of Christ, being stout hearted, and far from it; and being no more cordially willing to be subject to the sceptre of his kingdom, or to serve him in righteousness and holiness, than they ever were; for the word falling upon them, made no change in them; their hearts were as hard as ever, notwithstanding the seeming and hasty reception of it; though they did not refuse to hearken to the word externally, did not put away the shoulder, or stop their ears, yet their hearts were still like an adamant stone: nothing but the mighty power of God, and his efficacious grace, can break the rocky heart in pieces; or give an heart of flesh, a sensible, soft, and flexible one, with which a man truly repents of sin, believes in Christ, and becomes subject to him.
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Gill: Mat 13:6 - -- And when the sun was up,.... Some time, and its heat was increasing, and it began to shine out hot, and beat with some vehemency and strength; which m...
And when the sun was up,.... Some time, and its heat was increasing, and it began to shine out hot, and beat with some vehemency and strength; which may denote some sore temptation, or severe affliction, or fiery trial of persecution and tribulation; see Mat 13:21 for this is not to be understood of the glorious light of the Gospel, which, though very comfortable and refreshing, as well as illuminating to good men, is very distressing and tormenting to carnal minds; they cannot bear its truths and doctrines; this is the fire which comes out of the mouth of God's faithful witnesses, and torments them that dwell on the earth, and devours their enemies, Rev 11:5. And it, moreover, like the sun, has different effects on different objects; as the sun hardens clay, and melts wax, so the Gospel is to the hardening of some, and softening of others; to the one it is the savour of life unto life, and to the other the savour of death unto death; but this cannot be intended, because the word by these hearers is first received with joy. Nor is Christ the sun of righteousness meant, who arises with healing in his wings, and gives grace and glory to his people; but the sun of persecution and affliction, in which sense the metaphor is used, in Son 1:6 the heat of which the church patiently bore, though she was made black with it: but these hearers think it strange that such a fiery trial should befall them; wherefore, as they take up their profession in haste, they as quickly drop it; see Rev 7:16.
They were scorched, and because they had not root, they withered away: they were offended with what they met with, for the sake of Christ, and the profession of his word; and therefore, not being rooted in him, nor in the love of God, nor having the root of the matter, true grace, in themselves, or, as Luke says, "lacked moisture", of divine grace, of the dews and waterings of it, fell away finally and totally. This is no instance of the apostasy of real saints, or any proof of true believers falling away finally and totally; since these were not rooted, and grounded in the everlasting and unchangeable love of God, were not interested in it, or were partakers of the effects of it; had they been so, they could never have been separated from it; tribulation, distress, and persecution could never have done it; none of these would ever have moved them; had they had the love of God shed abroad in their hearts, they would have gloried in tribulation: nor were they united to Christ, rooted and built up in him; had they, they would have continued to have derived life and nourishment from him; in him the life of believers is hid, and because he lives they live also; as long as there is life in the root, the branches will not die; he is the root that bears the branches, the root of the righteous that yields fruit, and is never moved: nor had these the truth of grace, which is an incorruptible seed, a well of living water springing up to everlasting life; had they, they could never have withered away; to such God gives more grace, he himself is as the dew unto them, and he waters them every moment.
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Gill: Mat 13:7 - -- And some fell among thorns,.... On a spot of ground which was full of the roots of thorns, and briars, which was not cleared of them as it should be. ...
And some fell among thorns,.... On a spot of ground which was full of the roots of thorns, and briars, which was not cleared of them as it should be. We often read e of
and the thorns sprung up: naturally, being neither sown nor planted; either before the seed, or, at least, as soon; and however grew faster, and higher,
and choked them; so that they came to nothing; hence the advice, "sow not among thorns", Jer 4:3 and a lost kindness, or what is bestowed in vain, is expressed in this proverbial manner f,
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Gill: Mat 13:8 - -- But others fell into good ground,.... Not beaten and trodden by the feet of men, nor stony, nor thorny, but well broke up, manured, and tilled; which ...
But others fell into good ground,.... Not beaten and trodden by the feet of men, nor stony, nor thorny, but well broke up, manured, and tilled; which designs good, honest hearted hearers who become so by the Spirit and grace of God; who with a spiritual understanding, experience, savour, and relish, what they hear; see Mat 13:23
and brought forth fruit, some an hundred fold, some sixty fold, some thirty fold: some seeds produced an hundred, others sixty, and others thirty. The first of these especially was a large increase, but what was sometimes had, and which Isaac received in Gerar, in the land of the Philistines, Gen 26:12 and is what Pliny says g of Byzacium, a country of the Lybiphoenicians, that it yielded an hundred fold to its husbandmen; and of such fruitfulness was the land of Israel, of which the Jewish doctors say some things incredible: they tell us a story h of
"one that sowed a measure of vetches, or pease,
Here, in the parable, these various increases intend the different degrees of fruitfulness in gracious souls; for though the fruits of grace, in believers, are of the same quality, yet not of the same quantity. Some believers are grown to a greater maturity than others; some are but little children, some are young men, some are fathers.
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Mat 13:2 Grk “and all the crowd.” The clause in this phrase, although coordinate in terms of grammar, is logically subordinate to the previous clau...
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NET Notes: Mat 13:3 A sower went out to sow. The background for this well-known parable, drawn from a typical scene in the Palestinian countryside, is a field through whi...
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NET Notes: Mat 13:4 In Matthew’s version of this parable, plural pronouns are used to refer to the seed in v. 4 (ἅ…αὐτά [Ja…a...
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Geneva Bible -> Mat 13:2
Geneva Bible: Mat 13:2 ( 1 ) And great multitudes were gathered together unto him, so that he went into a ship, and sat; and the whole multitude stood on the shore.
( 1 ) C...
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Mat 13:1-58
TSK Synopsis: Mat 13:1-58 - --1 The parable of the sower and the seed;18 the exposition of it.24 The parable of the tares;31 of the mustard seed;33 of the leaven;36 exposition of t...
Maclaren -> Mat 13:1-9
Maclaren: Mat 13:1-9 - --Four Sowings And One Ripening
The same day went Jesus out of the house, and sat by the sea side. 2. And great multitudes were gathered together unto ...
MHCC -> Mat 13:1-23
MHCC: Mat 13:1-23 - --Jesus entered into a boat that he might be the less pressed, and be the better heard by the people. By this he teaches us in the outward circumstances...
Matthew Henry -> Mat 13:1-23
Matthew Henry: Mat 13:1-23 - -- We have here Christ preaching, and may observe, 1. When Christ preached this sermon; it was the same day that he preached the sermon in the forego...
Barclay: Mat 13:1-9 - --"Listen then to the meaning of the parable of the sower. When anyone hears the word of the kingdom, and does not understand it, the evil one comes,...
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Barclay: Mat 13:1-9 - --This parable is really aimed at two sets of people.
(a) It is aimed at the hearers of the word. It is fairly frequently held by scholars that the int...
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Barclay: Mat 13:1-9 - --(b) We said this parable had a double impact. We have looked at the impact it was designed to have on those who hear the word. But it was equally de...
Constable: Mat 11:2--13:54 - --IV. The opposition to the King 11:2--13:53
Chapters 11-13 record Israel's rejection of her Messiah and its conse...
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Constable: Mat 13:1-53 - --C. Adaptations because of Israel's rejection of Jesus 13:1-53
"The die is cast. The religious leaders ha...
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Constable: Mat 13:1-3 - --1. The setting 13:1-3a (cf. Mark 4:1-2; Luke 8:4)
Matthew linked this parabolic teaching with th...
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Constable: Mat 13:3-9 - --The parable of the soils 13:3b-9 (cf. Mark 4:3-9; Luke 8:5-8)
The first parable is an introduction to those that follow, and the last one is a conclus...
College -> Mat 13:1-58
College: Mat 13:1-58 - --MATTHEW 13
L. THE PARABLES OF THE KINGDOM (13:1-52)
In the discourse to follow (i.e., 13:1-53), Jesus assumes the role of a storyteller, and relates...
McGarvey -> Mat 13:1-3; Mat 13:1-23
McGarvey: Mat 13:1-3 - --
LIV.
THE FIRST GREAT GROUP OF PARABLES.
(Beside the Sea of Galilee.)
Subdivision A.
INTRODUCTION.
aMATT. XIII. 1-3; bMARK IV. 1, 2; cLUKE VIII. 4.
&...
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