Resource > Expository Notes on the Bible (Constable) >  Matthew >  Exposition >  IV. The opposition to the King 11:2--13:53 >  C. Adaptations because of Israel's rejection of Jesus 13:1-53 >  2. Parables addressed to the multitudes 13:3b-33 > 
The parable of the weeds 13:24-30 
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"The parable of the sower shows that though the kingdom will now make its way amid hard hearts, competing pressures, and even failure, it will produce an abundant crop. But one might ask whether Messiah's people should immediately separate the crop from the weeds; and this next parable answers the question negatively: there will be a delay in separation until the harvest."542

13:24 Jesus told the crowds another parable. He literally said, "The kingdom of heaven has become like. . ."Matthew used the aorist passive tense, homoiothe. This is very significant because it indicates a change in the kingdom program. The change was a result of Israel's rejection of Jesus. In all these parables Jesus did not mean that any single person or object in the parable symbolized the kingdom. The narrative itself communicated truth about the kingdom.

13:25-26 The farmer's enemy maliciously sowed weeds that looked like the wheat. This weed was evidently bearded darnel (Lat. lolium temulentum), a plant that looks very much like wheat when the plants are young. The roots would intertwine with those of the wheat, but when the two plants reached maturity it would be clear which was which. The enemy thoroughly distributed the darnel seed among the young wheat. As the plants grew, it became apparent to the field owner's servants what the enemy had done.

13:27 The function of the slaves in the parable is simply to get information from the owner.

13:28-30 The owner recognized that an enemy was responsible for the weeds, but he instructed his servants to allow the weeds to grow beside the wheat until the harvest. Then he would separate them. Evidently there were many weeds. The reapers would gather the weeds first and burn them. Then they would harvest the wheat.

Jesus interpreted this parable to His disciples later (vv. 36-43). He previously used the Old Testament figure of harvest to refer to judgment (9:37-38). In this case the wheat and the weeds must be people who face judgment in the future.543



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