In the sermon titled "The Sower," Paul Mahan expounds on the parable from Matthew 13:3-23, focusing on the reception of God's Word within various human hearts. He illustrates that the sower represents God and the Holy Spirit, while the seed symbolizes the Word of God, which must penetrate the human heart for life to flourish. Mahan categorizes four types of receptiveness: the wayside heart (unresponsive), the stony ground heart (shallow and superficial), the thorny ground heart (distracted by worldly cares), and the good ground heart (broken and receptive). He emphasizes the necessity of divine intervention—namely, God granting a new heart—as critical for any authentic response to the Gospel. This parable accentuates the Reformed doctrine of total depravity, underlining that without the Spirit's transformative work, individuals remain unable to accept or understand God's Word.
“A parable is an earthly story that illustrates heavenly or spiritual truth, and the Lord often spoke in parables.”
“The sower is God Almighty... the Spirit of God must put Jesus Christ by faith in the heart of a human being or there won't be life.”
“The only good heart is a broken heart... broken by the Spirit of God, broken over their sin.”
“Oh, may the Lord break up your heart and cause the seed of His Word to be planted and bring forth life.”
Auto-generated transcript • May contain errors
Comments
Your comment has been submitted and is awaiting moderation. Once approved, it will appear on this page.
Be the first to comment!