Most
assuredly, I say to you, unless a grain of wheat falls into
the ground and dies, it remains alone; but if it dies, it produces
much grain.
John 12:24
John 12:24
Now,
is this a title, or is it a parable? It’s both. In context, this
verse comes right after the triumphal entry and the Lord just told
His disciples that the hour had come for Him to be glorified. He
already told His disciples that He was coming to Jerusalem to die and
they didn’t get it. He now tries to get through to them by saying
that He is going to be like a grain of wheat.
Once
a farmer sows his seed, there is no way to get it back. Wheat is just
a fancy grass and there’s a lot that can go wrong. If there’s too
much or too little rain, it’s too hot or too cold, or there are too
many bugs, it just won't produce. That’s not even figuring in dust
storms, hail, wheat rust, mildew, and rot. Hungry farmers throughout
the centuries have learned not to plow the last of their grain into
the ground. If they do, there’s no guarantee that they’ll have anything to eat later.
Most
farmers I know are religious (I’m talking family farmers, not big
corporations). They have to believe that there is a power greater
than themselves that makes things to grow and they trust Him to do
His job if they do theirs. It takes a lot of faith to take tomorrow's
meal, bury it in the dirt, and pour water on it.
Christ
somehow had to convince His disciples that the capital punishment He
was about to receive was not just a senseless act of injustice. He
was going to be glorified by it and they were the ones that were
going to benefit.
The
disciples knew that it was dangerous to go to Jerusalem, but He went
anyway. He had to go; He had to die. If He didn’t go, there never
would have been eternal life; He could never provide for their
spiritual sustenance. He first had to become a Grain of Wheat.
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