Parable of the Wheat & Weeds (Matthew 13:24-43) episode artwork

EPISODE · Sep 20, 2012 · 42 MIN

Parable of the Wheat & Weeds (Matthew 13:24-43)

from Wednesday in the Word · host Krisan Marotta

In a world that prefers blurred lines and “shades of gray,” Jesus tells a story about wheat and weeds that insists judgment is real, coming, and impossible to avoid. In this episode on Matthew 13:24–43, we explore the parable of the wheat and the tares as an analogy of God’s delayed but certain judgment, why evil is allowed to grow alongside good for now, and how that delay is actually an expression of mercy rather than indifference. In this week’s episode, we explore:How this parable follows the Sower and answers a new question: if the Messiah has come, why isn’t he judging evil now?What first-century Jews expected the kingdom to look like—swift moral cleansing, political victory, and clear separation between the righteous and the wickedThe details of the story: good seed, a hostile enemy, look-alike wheat and tares, and why pulling the weeds too soon would damage the cropWhy this is an analogy, not a coded allegory, and how Jesus himself interprets it as a “just as / so also” comparison between story and final judgmentHow the parable explains God’s delay: he postpones judgment for the sake of rescuing people, yet guarantees that justice will be thorough, fierce, and finalWhat Zephaniah and other prophets add to the picture—a sobering portrait of the “day of the Lord” and a reminder that no one is safe on their own meritsHow God’s patience can be dangerously misunderstood as permissiveness, leading to complacency, compromise, and false confidence in wealth or religionCommon misuses of this parable in church history around discipline and “tolerating evil,” and why its main focus is God’s final judgment, not our sorting of peopleA better way to respond: taking sin and judgment seriously while mirroring Jesus’ posture toward sinners—clear about guilt, yet eager to seek, win, and restoreAfter listening, you’ll come away with a more sober and hopeful view of God’s judgment: sober, because the day of harvest will be inescapable and complete; hopeful, because God’s delay is meant to give space for repentance, faith, and genuine transformation. You’ll be encouraged to live as someone who believes judgment is real—reordering your priorities around what lasts—and to entrust the final sorting of wheat and weeds to God, while spending your days seeking the lost with clarity, courage, and compassion. Series: The Parables of Jesus: Pictures of the KingdomMost people fail at Bible study because no one ever taught them how. Bible Study Boot Camp fixes that: one short email a day for a week, plus a worksheet you can use on any passage for the rest of your life.Sign up for Bible Study Boot Camp

In a world that prefers blurred lines and “shades of gray,” Jesus tells a story about wheat and weeds that insists judgment is real, coming, and impossible to avoid. In this episode on Matthew 13:24–43, we explore the parable of the wheat and the tares as an analogy of God’s delayed but certain judgment, why evil is allowed to grow alongside good for now, and how that delay is actually an expression of mercy rather than indifference. In this week’s episode, we explore: How this parable ...

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Parable of the Wheat & Weeds (Matthew 13:24-43)

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This episode was published on September 20, 2012.

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In a world that prefers blurred lines and “shades of gray,” Jesus tells a story about wheat and weeds that insists judgment is real, coming, and impossible to avoid. In this episode on Matthew 13:24–43, we explore the parable of the wheat and the...

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