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Jesus drops parable after parable about what God's kingdom is actually like — mustard seeds, hidden treasure, pearls, and a farmer who can't stop getting his crops sabotaged
Jesus teaches the crowds in parables because apparently that's the only way some people will listen. He compares God's kingdom to a mustard seed (starts tiny, grows massive), hidden treasure (worth selling everything for), a pearl of great price (same energy), a net that catches all kinds of fish (sorted later), and a farmer whose enemy plants weeds among his wheat. The Parable of the Sower is the headliner — four types of soil representing how people receive God's word. The disciples privately ask why He speaks in parables, and Jesus basically says 'if they really wanted to understand, they would.' Hard truth delivered through farming metaphors.
Jesus pulls up to the beach and starts dropping parables like a playlist on repeat. Seeds, weeds, mustard trees, hidden treasure — every story hits different. Some people get it. Most don't. And that's lowkey the whole point.
MarkSeeds, Secrets, and a Storm That Got WreckedJesus drops parable after parable from a boat, breaks down why some people just don't get it, and then casually tells a killer storm to shut up. The disciples are shook. No cap.
LukeStorms, Demons, and Main Character FaithLuke 8 moves at full speed — Jesus drops a parable that exposes how most people handle God's word, bosses a storm with His voice, frees a man from a literal legion of demons, and pulls off back-to-back healings that left everyone shook. Every scene answers the same question: who exactly is this guy?
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