Emblems of the Word (4): SeedRev David BluntAn
emblem is an object which symbolises something distinct from itself and
yet is very suggestive of that thing. An association exists between the
emblem and the reality which puts certain ideas into our minds. We use
signs, badges and motifs to this purpose today. In the Bible God
employs familiar objects to represent His inspired word to men: each
emblem shows us vital truths concerning the word of God which make it
so precious to have and so necessary to use. In this series we look at
some of these emblems.First published in the Presbyterian Standard, Issue 24, October-December 2001.Seed A
SEED is a structure by which living things, especially plants,
reproduce. In His wisdom God ordained that each species would multiply
and spread, not by a repeated act of special creation but from within
itself. The original organisms would form seed from which new
individuals would arise; these in turn would form their own seed,
producing yet further individuals, and so on. We see this provision
when the first life appears on the third day of creation. “And
God said, Let the earth bring forth grass, the herb yielding seed, and
the fruit tree yielding fruit after his kind, whose seed is in itself,
upon the earth: and it was so” (Gen. 1:11). The idea
of seed is very important in the Bible. Most significantly it concerns
the Lord Jesus Christ. The first revelation of Him to a fallen world is
as the Seed of the woman (Gen. 3:15). For our redemption He would take
to Himself a human nature. He would be “made of a woman”
– of her very substance (Gal. 4:4). The world waited “till
the seed should come” (Gal. 3:19) and the Lord’s people now
wait eagerly until He comes again. Believers too are
described as ‘seed’. Whether they are Jews or Gentiles they
are “Abraham’s seed, and heirs according to the
promise” (Gal. 3:29). Abraham was the archetype of a sinner
justified by faith, so “they which are of faith, the same are the
children of Abraham” (Gal. 3:7). Seed is also a
metaphor for the Word of God. This association is one which is
scattered throughout Scripture. God’s word is “precious
seed” (Psa. 126:6). There are certainly three great features of a
seed which teach us something wonderful about the Word. Size How
little a seed appears in the palm of our hand! It might easily be
dropped or blown away in the wind. Yet what potential there is in a
seed. Of the tiny mustard seed Jesus said that it is “the least
of all seeds,” but “when it is grown, it is the greatest
among herbs, and becometh a tree, so that the birds of the air come and
lodge in the branches thereof” (Matt. 13:32). The
Bible perhaps resembles a seed in its size. It is not a large book
after all: some editions might easily fit in the pocket. Have we ever
thought that the Bible is just one small volume against the millions of
volumes which have been written by mere men? “Of making many
books there is no end” (Ecc. 12:12) said wise Solomon. If this
was true in his day, how much more in ours! Books of every shape, size
and subject pour off the printing presses, most of them destined for
oblivion. Some individual authors have written many more words than are
contained in the pages of the Bible. Their works may be popular for a
time. Yet no book has been so copied and circulated as the Bible, such
that it has spread over the whole earth. And no book has had such a
healthful and blessed influence over so great a period of time. The
Bible certainly resembles a seed in its development. It had a small
beginning in an obscure nation. It was not written all at once but grew
slowly. Nearly forty men contributed to it over sixteen hundred years.
Yet despite their varied backgrounds, circumstances and characters they
wrote, under the inspiration of God, on one consistent theme. The Lord
Jesus Christ, in His glorious Person and redemptive work, is the sum
and substance of Holy Scripture. “In the volume of the book it is
written of me” (Psa. 40:7). The Bible commences with Genesis, the
book of beginnings. The germ of every doctrine is there. We have the
beginning of creation, providence and redemption. We discover the
origin of life and death, of sin and grace. Especially we find the
Saviour of our souls. We see His humanity in the Seed of the Woman and
His divinity in the Angel of the Lord. We see His of fices of prophet,
priest and king prefigured in Abraham and Melchizedek. We see His
sacrfice for sin portrayed in the offering of Isaac. All these things
are developed in the books of the Old Testament until the full flower
of truth is seen in the New Testament. It has been well said that in
the Old Testament Christ is infolded, in the New He is unfolded; in the
Old Testament Christ is latent, in the New He is patent. Strength A
seed seems to be a poor, lifeless thing but hidden within it there is
great strength. For many the Bible is a dead book, belonging to another
age. They think that its soul departed long ago. But there are those
who have lifted a Bible from a shelf or a pew, with its dry and dusty
covers, turned over its pages – and found that its spirit has
miraculously returned! Its contents have been blessed to their souls.
As Christ is “the word of life (1 John 1:1) so the Scriptures are
also called “the word of life” (Phil. 2:16). God has so
invested Himself in His Word that it appears to have the attributes of
the divine personality. If God searches us and knows us then so does
His word: it is “a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the
heart” (Heb. 4:12). If God knows the future then so does the
Bible: “The scripture, foreseeing that God would justify the
heathen through faith, preached before the gospel unto Abraham”
(Gal.3:8). As Luther said: “The Bible is alive, it speaks to me;
it has feet, it runs after me; it has hands, it lays hold of
me.” The power of life seen in a seed is not given to
it by the earth in which it lies. So with the word of God in the heart
of a sinner. It is God who gives life to the spiritually dead. Some
teach that man is able to produce the acts of conversion by himself but
Scripture says that these things are the work of God’s grace
(Eph.2:10; Phil. 2:13). They only appear because of the new life God
has given to the soul in regeneration. “Of his own will begat he
us with the word of truth” (Jam. 1:18). If faith, repentance,
love and obedience do not grow out of this root they will soon wither
and die. A seed may live and grow in the most inhospitable
conditions. Thomas Watson called the Scriptures the “breeder and
feeder of grace” and because of the power of grace a believer may
persevere and prosper in union and communion with Christ even in the
wilderness of this world. Joseph’s soul thrived in Egypt,
Daniel’s in Babylon, Paul’s in Rome. There are many
Christians today who battle against hardships, persecutions and perhaps
even the threat of death. Yet with the word of God in their hearts they
are able to “sing the Lord’s song in a strange land”
(Psa. 137:4). The Bible itself has faced the devil’s
onslaughts since he first entered the garden of Eden and queried the
word of God. The evil one has sought to crush the life out of the
precious seed by the open infidelity of higher criticism and the
subtlety of lower criticism. The first attacks the inspiration of the
Scriptures and the second the preservation of the Scriptures. But their
life is supernatural and invincible. “The words that I speak unto
you, they are spirit, and they are life” (John 6:63).
“Heaven and earth shall pass away, but my words shall not pass
away” (Matt. 24:35). Success What gives
success to a seed? We have all had the experience of planting what we
thought was perfectly good seed, only to have it fail to germinate. We
took great care to prepare the soil, fertilise it and water it. In the
end it seems to be a matter of sovereignty. “Thou knowest not
whether shall prosper, either this or that” (Ecc. 11:6). So it is
with the preaching of the gospel. One sermon is used, another is not.
One man is blessed, another is not. God gives the increase (1 Cor.
3:7). Several of our Lord’s parables describe the
development of God’s kingdom by the figure of the sowing of seed.
After sowing his field a farmer gets on with other things, for the
result is now out of his hands. It is wonderful when something is
glimpsed above the ground! The seed has come to life. It is quite
beyond our understanding. Life begins before the blade appears but
until then it is hidden under the earth and cannot be detected. There
has been a struggle as the growing shoot pushes its way through the
packed soil, past stones and above the earth. Conversion to Christ is
not an easy thing, for our minds are blind, our natures are wicked, our
wills are enslaved, and the devil puts many obstacles in the way of our
coming to the Saviour. But nothing will prevent the word sown in our
hearts from coming to life, if it please the Lord. A
growing plant is nourished from the soil and remains healthy. It
withstands the attack of every storm, disease and pest. AChristian
needs to feed his soul by regularly hearing the preaching of the
gospel, by prayer and by fellowship with other believers. Only in this
way will he be kept from spiritual danger and prosper under every trial
and affliction. His life will bear the appropriate fruit of holiness
and good works to the glory of God. And his new life cannot perish, for
the word of God is rooted in his heart in regeneration. This is an
‘incorruptible seed’ (1 Pet. 1:23). Like the
One who is its grand Subject, the Bible is “despised and rejected
of men.” But it is invaluable to us all the same, the source of
our strength and health of soul. Joseph Alleine wrote of how the Bible
is good for the saint and sinner alike: “O ye saints, how you
should love the Word, for by this you have been converted...Tie it
about your neck, write it upon your hand, lay it in your bosom. When
you go let it lead you, when you sleep let it keep you, when you wake
let it talk with you. You that are unconverted, read the Word with
diligence; flock to where it is powerfully preached. Pray for the
coming of the Spirit in the Word. Come from your knees to the sermon,
and come from the sermon to your knees.” May our hearts prove to
be good soil for God’s good seed. |