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Our current state of affairs, however, reveals many birds and weeds that actively oppose the Gospel and rocky ground in which it cannot grow deep roots. We should remember that this parable is not ...
Last Sunday we had the Parable of the Sower and for this Sunday, it is the Parable of the Weeds among the Wheat, which you can read in Matt. 13:24-43. 24 “[Jesus] proposed [a] parable to [the ...
It contains two short parables—about a mustard seed and yeast—and a long parable with an allegorical interpretation—about the wheat and the weeds. All three parables explicitly propose to ...
In Matthew 13: 24-30, Jesus Christ spoke of the parable of the weeds; “The Kingdom of heaven may be compared to a man who sowed good seed in his field; but while men were sleeping, his enemy ...
Elder Donald D. Deshler of the Seventy, the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints: We learn in this parable that God permits both wheat (the good crop) and tares (the weeds) to grow together ...
In Matthew 13, Jesus taught the parable of the wheat and the tares. Tares are weeds that resemble wheat. In the parable, a wheat field had deliberately been polluted by an enemy who sowed the ...
Jesus, of course, explains the parable of the wheat and tares to his Apostles. As we saw, the wheat is God’s good seed; the weeds are the devil’s work. God lets them co-exist, but not ...
Today we learn about another parable; it is the Parable of the Weeds Among the Wheat. You can read this Gospel in Matthew 13:24-43. “[Jesus} proposed another parable to [the crowds].
At that time I will tell the harvesters: First collect the weeds and tie them in bundles to be burned; then gather the wheat and bring it into my barn.’ The parable is explained later in the ...
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