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The Goldfinch as a Key to Reading Parables


Pentecost 5, Proper 10, Year A
Matthew 13: 1-9
July 13, 2014

You may have noticed that I stopped reading the Gospel half-way through what was printed in your bulletin.  There’s no mistake in the bulletin; the whole reading is intended to be part of the lectionary reading for today.  And I didn’t forget to turn the page.  I just don’t want you to hear it.  Not yet anyway.  For now, I just want you to sit on that seashore with the water lapping at your feet, taking in the sight of Jesus bobbing in that boat just a few feet away, listening to the sound of his voice sharing a story that is so simple and yet is about so many things that your mind can’t get around it. 
“A farmer went out to sow his seed. As he was scattering the seed, some fell along the path, and the birds came and ate it up. Some fell on rocky places, where it did not have much soil. It sprang up quickly, because the soil was shallow. But when the sun came up, the plants were scorched, and they withered because they had no root. Other seed fell among thorns, which grew up and choked the plants. Still other seed fell on good soil, where it produced a crop—a hundred, sixty or thirty times what was sown. Whoever has ears, let them hear.”
I wonder who the farmer might be?  I wonder what the farmer might be using for seed?  I wonder what might be all the different places where the seed fell?  What could the path really be?  What might the birds represent?  What might the rocks really be, or the thorns?  Where is the good soil, and what makes it good?  What kind of harvest did these seeds turn out? 
And, maybe more importantly, where are you in this parable, or what part of this story is about you?  At the end of the day, I’m more and more convinced that that is what matters the most. 
Sure, we can study the history of the Bible.  We can learn about the time and place of its writing and what was going on in the world of its writers and hearers.  We can compare stories among Gospels and translations.  Look into the Hebrew or the Greek.  Study all the different ways commentators interpret different pieces. 
            And we can learn a lot studying that way.  For this passage, we’d learn that the answer key (the part I skipped) is almost certainly a later add-on by the early church who wanted to spin this parable to encourage believers struggling against persecution to hold fast to their faith.  And we’d learn about the difficulties of planting in 1st Century Palestine.  We’d learn that in Jesus’ day, a good yield in a harvest would have been about 7 bushels, so the seeds in this parable that bring forth 30, 60, 100 bushels are miraculously bountiful.  We’d learn that and much more. 
            But we can also get stuck there.  That’s where I found myself a week ago.  I’d studied the passage, read the commentaries, and gotten myself so mired in the details that I couldn’t find my way out.  And then I read something completely unrelated.  Or at least, as seemingly completely unrelated as something can be in the context of God’s creation. 
            I read Donna Tartt’s beautiful novel, The Goldfinch.  It was one of those books that so engages you in the world of the characters that you find yourself almost unable to interact with people in your own world.  Even with its 771 pages, it was one of those books that I’d wished I could go on reading forever. 
         The Goldfinch is about a boy, Theo, who is visiting the Metropolitan Museum of Art with his mother as a teenager.  Theo’s mother, somewhat of an art historian, shows him a small painting of a beautiful and lifelike goldfinch chained to his perch.  She loved this painting since coming across it in a book as a child.  A few minutes later, while Theo and his mother are in different parts of the museum, a bomb goes off.  In the smoke and confusion of the moment, Theo rescues the painting of the goldfinch and goes in search of his mother.  He ends up almost accidentally stealing the painting, and the rest of the book is about what happens to Theo and the painting.
           Along Theo’s way there is reckless and abundant sowing, and there are stones that impede, and thorns that choke, and birds that steal.  But there is also incredibly rich soil and miraculous growth.  The Goldfinch turned out to be a parable too, maybe even the same parable that Jesus told, but with very different words and contexts.
            What stopped me in my tracks particularly about this book as I read it in parallel to thinking about this Gospel passage were Theo’s thoughts at the end as he looks back over his life.  As Theo says about the painting that captures his heart: “Scholars might care about the innovative brushwork and use of light, the historical influence and the unique significance in Dutch art.  But not me.  As my mother said all those years ago, my mother who loved the painting only from seeing it in a book she borrowed from the Comanche County Library as a child: the significance doesn’t matter.  The historical significance deadens it.  Across those unbridgeable distances – between bird and painter, painting and viewer – I hear only too well what’s being said to me, a psst from an alleyway… across 400 years of time, and it’s really very personal and specific.”  (767)
Add another 1600 years for the parable’s time lapse to reach us, but the intention is the same.  Jesus wants this story to whisper to us, personally and specifically.  To capture our hearts and our imaginations.  For us to incorporate it into something that matters for us.  If we’re serious about this being the living Word of God, a Word that continues to speak and be relevant, we have to listen and let it do its work.  And then we have to stand back and accept the sometimes frightening proposition that how this speaks and what it means to me might be very different from how it speaks and what it means to you.  What Word does God have for you in this reading today?  What might God be calling you to do or be based on what you hear?
            It may not be immediately obvious.  And it may not be comfortable.  That’s part of how Jesus works.  Jesus uses parables not to simplify or to teach some piece of information, but to enlarge the possibilities and to prepare us for our work in bringing about the Kingdom of God.  Jesus wants there to be doubt about how this story applies.  Jesus wants us to think about it, play with it, mull it over, be changed by it.  A blog I read wrote this “rule of thumb” for reading one of Jesus’ parables: “If I interpret it in such a way that there is nothing surprising or shocking or for me about it, it’s time to go back and read it again.”  Parables seek not to inform us, but to transform us as we wrestle with them.
The way Theo thought about the transformation his painting worked upon him sounds a lot like what I’m pretty sure Jesus has in mind for all of us in this parable:  “You can have a lifetime of perfectly sincere museum-going where you traipse around enjoying everything and then go out and have some lunch.  But if a painting really works down in your heart and changes the way you see, and think, and feel, you don’t think, ‘oh, I love this picture because it’s universal.’ ‘I love this painting because it speaks to all mankind.’  That’s not the reason anyone loves a piece of art.  It’s a secret whisper from an alleyway.  Psst, you.  Hey kid.  Yes you. An individual heart-shock…  You see one painting, I see another, the art book puts it at another remove still, the lady buying the greeting card at the museum gift shop sees something else entire, and that’s not even to mention the people separated from us by time – 400 years before us, 400 years after we’re gone – it’ll never strike anybody the same way and the great majority of people it’ll never strike in any deep way at all but – a really great painting is fluid enough to work its way into the mind and heart through all kinds of different angles, in ways that are unique and very particular.  Yours, yours. I was painted for you.” (758)
So listen again to another translation of our parable: “Listen!  What do you make of this?  A farmer planted seed.  As he scattered the seed, some of it fell on the road, and birds ate it.  Some fell in the gravel; it sprouted quickly but didn’t put down roots, so when the sun came up it withered just as quickly.  Some fell in the weeds; as it came up, it was strangled by the weeds.  Some fell on good earth, and produced a harvest beyond his wildest dreams.  Are you listening to this?  Really listening?”[1]
This is a Godly play staple and I’ve used this story and its wondering questions with adults too.  The ways people have seen it are incredibly diverse, and incredibly beautiful.  One person saw himself as the Farmer, called to be loving and giving to everyone around him.  For him this was a reminder to persevere in a frustrating relationship.  Another person saw herself as the entire path, sometimes not yielding fruit but sometimes wonderfully open to the love of God, and she was comforted that the current dry time would pass.  Another mentioned that even something as seemingly unhelpful as the birds of the air that stole the sowed seeds could also be another avenue of spreading the seed in a new and unexpected place.  For her, this pointed to the ways that bad or disappointing things can sometimes lead to joy and grace.  A child suggested that he was the seed and brainstormed some ideas for growing.
So, sure, you can go ahead and read yourself the end of the Gospel reading for today if you need to.  But don’t let the writer fool you into thinking that is THE answer, or even the answer for you.  It’s an answer, sure, and maybe even a perfectly fine one.  But don’t let it dictate or limit the possibilities of this parable for you. 
Don’t just get close to the mystery of God and enjoy it and then go out and have some lunch.  Let the mystery work down in your heart and change the way you see, and think, and feel.  Open yourself to God speaking something new, something surprising, something extraordinary … to you.  Through this parable, maybe, or through whatever other beautiful seeds might be recklessly and abundantly thrown your way.  Amen.



[1] Translation from The Message, by Eugene H. Peterson.

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