Matthew 13:31-33, 44-52
When I was a teenager there was a lady at church who used to pay me to come dig dandelions out of her yard. You can’t just pull them or cut them; you have to dig them out because they’re perennials, and if the tap root is left intact they’ll simply grow back. I don’t bother digging them out of our yard. I know it’s a losing battle. Besides, if you keep the yard mowed, the grass and the dandelions tend to strike a balance.
Did you know that dandelions are not native to the Americas? They probably came here on the Mayflower. European colonists brought them here. On purpose. They’re actually very useful plants. Every part of the dandelion is edible. The leaves can be used in salads or sautéed or boiled, like spinach. The flower petals can be fermented along with other juices, usually citrus, to make dandelion wine. The roots, when dried and ground into powder, can be used as a caffeine-free substitute for coffee and were an essential ingredient in the original recipe for root beer. Raw dandelion greens are a moderate source of calcium, potassium, iron, and manganese and contain high amounts of vitamin A, vitamin C, vitamin K, beta carotene and other anti-oxidants.
Dandelions have been used in natural medicine for thousands of years. The root is a diuretic. The leaves are good for treating constipation. Dandelions have been used in natural medicine to treat liver and stomach problems, diabetes, cancer, and high blood pressure.
And if all that isn’t enough to make you appreciate the lowly dandelion, when the pretty little yellow flower turns magically overnight to a silver puffball, you can pluck the stem and make a wish as you blow on it to scatter the seeds to the wind.
So what do you see when you see a dandelion? A charming, tenacious, self-propagating, useful little plant that could actually be part of your dinner every night? Or a weed?
The kingdom of heaven is like a dandelion.
“The kingdom of heaven is like a mustard seed that someone took and sowed in his field,” said Jesus. “It is the smallest of all the seeds, but when it has grown it is the greatest of shrubs and becomes a tree, so that the birds of the air come and make nests in its branches.”
The people Jesus was talking to saw the mustard plant pretty much the way we see the dandelion. Pliny the Elder wrote about its many medicinal and culinary uses, but he was quick to note, “Mustard grows entirely wild, though it is improved by being transplanted: but on the other hand when it has once been sown it is scarcely possible to get the place free of it, as the seed when it falls germinates at once.” In other words, it has its uses, but it’s basically a weed. And yet, in Jesus’ story, someone actually plants it in his field. On purpose. Someone sees its inherent value. They know that mustard oil can help ease pain from stiff or bruised muscles. They know a mustard poultice can help ease asthma or relieve coughing and stuffy sinuses. They know mustard can function as a diuretic and help cleanse the liver. They know it can be used as a spice to flavor food and help preserve it.
As Jesus tells the story, the man plants one seed in his field. And if we’re a listener in Jesus’ audience we assume that soon the whole field will be transformed. It will be a mustard field. Jesus makes a point of also noting that other creatures also benefit from that mustard plant. The birds of the air have a place to land and build their nests.
The kingdom of heaven is like that.
When Jesus talks about the kingdom of heaven, he’s not talking about the afterlife. He’s talking about a life of mercy, grace and justice. Now. He’s talking about a life of generosity and abundance. Now. He’s talking about how that life of mercy, grace, justice, generosity and abundance reaches beyond us to benefit all of creation. Now.
When Jesus talks about the kingdom of heaven, he’s talking about the things we fail to notice, common everyday life things, little things that are right there in front of us if we will only take a moment to really look at them and appreciate them, if have enough sense to grasp their importance.
“The kingdom of heaven is like yeast that a woman took and mixed in with three measures of flour until all of it was leavened.”
Sounds simple enough, but there’s something we lose in the translation, so here are three things here to better understand this little parable.
First, the yeast isn’t yeast. It’s leaven. They didn’t know about yeast, per se, in Jesus’ time. Think sourdough starter. Making sourdough has been a fun trend during the pandemic. One of my friends makes regular posts on Facebook about the state of her starter. She even named it. I remember years ago when a friend sent us some starter that she was particularly proud of so that we could make some sourdough bread of our own. It was a thing to share it and pass it along. The kingdom of heaven is like that.
Second, the woman in the parable doesn’t “mix” the leaven into the flour. The Greek word there is enkrypto. It says literally that she hides it in the flour. The kingdom is something transformative that’s hidden in the midst of all the other ingredients—that little something that’s in, with, and under the other things that changes all of them. The kingdom of heaven is like that.
Third, three measures of flour. We’re not talking about 3 cups here. According to Amy-Jill Levine, in first century terms we’re looking at somewhere between 40 and 60 pounds of flour.[1] This woman in Jesus’ parable is making enough bread to feed her whole village and she’s going to need all the women in the village to help her knead the dough. The kingdom of heaven is like that.
Again, when Jesus talks about the reign of heaven, he is not talking about pearly gates and streets of gold in the life after life. He is talking about living an alternative life with alternative values and higher allegiances here and now. One of the times Jesus says this most plainly is in Luke 17:20-21.
Once Jesus was asked by the Pharisees when the kingdom of God was coming, and he answered, “The kingdom of God is not coming with things that can be observed; nor will they say, ‘Look, here it is!’ or ‘There it is!’ For, in fact, the kingdom of God is among you.”
The kingdom, the reign of heaven, is among us. It’s in the midst of us. Present tense. Now. That’s why Jesus uses such everyday pictures to describe it. It is a domain in which we live and move and have our being if we know how to see it.
The reign of heaven is learning to see each other as undiscovered treasures that we stumble across in a field that doesn’t belong to us, learning to see Christ in, with, and under each person we encounter.
The reign of heaven is discovering a pearl, a life, so valuable and beautiful that we’re willing to go all in to have it, to live it in a world that God so loves that God went all in to save it.
The reign of heaven is a splash of cold water on your face in the morning reminding you that in the clear waters of your baptism you were promised that nothing can separate you from the love of God in whom you live and move and have your being, reminding you that Christ is present in, with, and under the water, reminding you that life itself is always and everywhere being renewed and transformed by little things seen and unseen.
The kingdom of heaven is every act of justice, of kindness and mercy, of grace and generosity, floating into the world like a dandelion seed blown by a child’s wish. It plants itself in a crack in the sidewalk and brings color and new life out of the brokenness.
The kingdom of heaven is like that.
In Jesus’ name.
[1] Short Stories by Jesus: The Enigmatic Parables of a Controversial Rabbi, Amy-Jill Levine, p.121; HarperCollins, 2014