Sunday Gospel
Reflections
July 12, 2026 Cycle A
Matthew 13:1-23
Printed by Permission of the Arlington Catholic Herald
Why Jesus Uses Parables
Fr. Richard A. Miserendino
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Our Gospel this Sunday
contains
Matthew’s classic parable of the Sower and the seeds scattered
on different
types of soil. Sandwiched in the middle, between the parable
itself and the
interpretation given by Our Lord, is a fascinating little
dialogue that begins
with the question given to Jesus: Why do you speak to them in
parables?
It’s a worthy question.
Since most
homilies this Sunday will likely treat the seeds and the soil,
and since I’ve
already written a Catholic Herald commentary on that
portion of the
passage, I propose to treat the middle portion. Why does the
Lord teach in
parables?
In a way, the question
is similar to
the old joke about a master rabbi and his student. The student
asks: “Rabbi,
why do rabbis always answer a question with another question?”
To which the
rabbi responds: “Why wouldn’t a rabbi answer a question with
another question?”
Jesus’ answer about parables is almost as enigmatic as a parable
itself.
“Because knowledge of the mysteries of the kingdom of heaven has
been granted
to you, but to them it has not been granted.” What, precisely
does that mean?
The Lord teaches in
parables to make
the mysteries of the kingdom of heaven manifest, but only in
such a way that it
is visible to those with the correct disposition of mind and
heart. The
parables are fundamentally little stories, small vignettes that
invite the
hearer or reader to step outside of themselves and into another
world. The word
itself comes from the Greek “parabole,” which means “something
thrown
alongside” such as a lifeline or railing, like how an analogy
functions like a
handrail to help our mind get up a set of intellectual stairs.
Parables help
pull us outside of ourselves to see the world in a new light.
The first thing to note,
though, is
that parables only work if the hearer is willing to dive in and
put themselves
in the midst of the story. It is fully possible to listen to a
parable and to
dismiss it as a short and nice story with a morally snappy
ending. Or it is
possible to simply tune them out altogether as nonsense. To such
hearers, a
parable would fall on their ears like seed scattered on a path
or on rocky
ground. It gets snatched away by a thousand distracting,
fluttering birds of
our to-do list or never takes root. Parables demand a posture of
faith to be
understood and received. As such, they function like grace.
However, if one does
take the leap of
faith and enter the story, it immediately begins to take root in
our
imagination. Suddenly, as we picture ourselves in the midst of
the situation, a
whole new world of understanding springs in to life. Here is
part of the point
of a parable: It contains infinitely more information for the
hearer than a
simple statement of fact. It even contains a different sort of
information than
could ever be expressed by a dry explanation. Parables invite us
to consider things:
knowledge of persons, or experiences, or perceptions of colors
or situations,
or other non-propositional knowledge that cannot easily be put
into words.
The more we patiently
ponder a parable
and its details, the more it grows in our mind and bears fruit
beyond what any
simple definition or PowerPoint presentation can do. If a hearer
is willing to
allow the parable to throw down roots and guards it from the
thorns and
thistles of our daily anxieties and distractions, we are duly
rewarded. Every
seed bears a plant miraculously greater than its humble
beginning. The parable
similarly bears wisdom.
At their best, stories
can even help us
know other persons. Most of us have heard someone tell us enough
stories about
another friend unknown to us that we come to start to know them
ourselves.
Eleonore Stump, one of my favorite authors, has written
extensively to show
that stories give us “second person” knowledge. They bring us
into relationship
with someone else through the story in a real way, beyond merely
factual
knowledge.
Unsurprisingly,
therefore, spiritual
master Father Simeon, O.C.S.O., also writes that parables
“reveal the face of
God.” What do parables do? They create a story that invites us
(like grace)
deeper into a living relationship with God, where we can see him
face to face.
Thus, Jesus speaks in
parables —
because in them, by grace, we are invited into a new world of
communion with
the Father, if only we have the posture of faith to receive
those riches. To
those with that faith to enter: “To anyone who has, more will be
given and he
will grow rich; from anyone who has not, even what he has will
be taken away”
(Mt 13:12). God grant us the disposition to enter in.