I see a lot of Christians  listening to cute sermons,   and we're telling you to do  things that sound really big,   to forgive people and to be free of addiction,  but I hear the response from the people. When   the pulpit is echoing forth these lofty ideals,  the people are sitting in the pews saying, "How?   You're telling me what, but you're  not telling me how. I don't know how." "I don't know how to read my Bible.  I don't know how to pray for over   13 seconds without thinking about my  need for cereal at the grocery store."   Somebody try it. "I don't know how." That's  the most spiritual thing you've said all week.   Who did God pick to be the disciples of Jesus?  Religious professionals with academic know-how?   Who did God pick to carry his Son? What's the  first thing Mary said when the angel said,   "The one born of you is the  Holy One of God"? "How?" What's the first thing the disciples said when  Jesus said, "Feed these big crowds even though   you didn't pack a lunch"? "How?" That is  the starting place of spiritual growth.   To admit when God calls me to do something,   "But I don't know how. I don't know how."  "I don't know how to raise these kids.   I don't know how. I did before I had them,  but now they're here, and I don't know how."   I read the book, the baby book. It  told me that if you swaddle the child…   But I found out my firstborn  child was "un-swaddleable." "I don't know how. I hear you preaching these  great sermons. 'Keep your eyes on Jesus, and don't   look at the wind, and don't look at the waves.'  But how do I look at something that's invisible?   I hear what you're saying, and I want what  you got, but I don't know how!" How many   don't know how? Just see who I'm preaching to  and who I can leave alone. "I don't know how." "I don't know how to forgive  somebody but then make sure I   keep an appropriate distance so they don't  continue to violate me. I don't know how."   Here's a farmer who doesn't know how to make  a seed grow, and Jesus says, "It's like that." Growth is like that. There's a part you will play,  and you will know what to do. You sow, you water,   you plow, but you don't have to know how.   This is the dirty little secret of the kingdom  they don't want me to tell you. They want you to   think God chooses and uses and blesses people who  are experts and who are the epitome of perfection,   but I want to tell you who God is looking for:  fishermen like Peter, prostitutes like Rahab,   people who don't know how.  That's what God is looking for:   humble people. "Blessed are those who  hunger and thirst for righteousness."   Not those who are so full of their own  wisdom they cannot receive the wisdom of God. If you came here today with  an "I don't know how" heart,   God can fill what you will empty before him.   I don't have to know how it works.  If I did I'd still be at the house,   because I drove my Maxima here. I have no  idea how that button told my tires to spin.   I have a little bit of a concept, but not  much. I found out something about my car   that I found out about God. I found  out I don't have to understand it…   See, it got me from here to there and from  there to here, and here I am preaching,   but honestly, I don't know how. I have an iPad. I put my notes on my iPad. I  turn on my iPad. The notes appear on my iPad.   I preach to you. I understand what button  to push. I push it. I know what letters to   type. I type them. But as to how  the words appeared on the iPad,   I don't know how. It didn't stop me from  preaching. It didn't stop it from working. There may be somebody here today who is  in a situation where you don't know how.   "God, I'm not smart enough.  God, I wasn't trained for this.   God, I've never been this way before. God, this  is new to me. God, I feel like a rookie." God said   from heaven you don't have to  know how when you know who. Let's praise him like we know who  he is! He's the Lord of the harvest!   The seed is mine, but the harvest is his!   I don't have to know; I've just got to sow. Don't  let what you don't know keep you from sowing.   The farmer didn't know how it was going to happen,  but he knew what to do. "I have to keep sowing.   I have to keep praying. I have to  keep believing. I have to stay in   this house. I have to be present. I have  to show up. All I have to do is sow." You don't have to know how.   "I will make you fishers of men. All I  need is your boat. All I need is your will.   All I need is your 'want to.' All I need is  your surrender. All I need is your obedience."   But you stopped sowing because you didn't  know how. You don't have to know how. I can be like Abraham who set out from  Ur without knowing where he was going.   He didn't have to know how because he  knew who. Are you getting the lesson?   It's not just one text. It's the principle  of this parable that is illustrated.   The kingdom of God is like  a man who sowed. He did sow. Notice there is a part you play, but once  you do what you know, there is a point   you reach where you can't make it rain and you  can't control the rate of growth of the seed.   There are so many people who will hear  this message, online and in our campuses,   who are waiting to know before  you sow, and it's out of order.   As much as I want to preach theologically right  now, I just want to minister to you personally.   Let the dirt do its work. The  greatest growth happened not   when the farmer was doing his part  but when the dirt was doing its part. There's a cooperation that happens in each of our  lives that's between the things we can control… I   can plow, I can water, and I can sow. I can speak  words of encouragement. I can speak words of life.   I can invest my resources into the  kingdom of God. I can do all of that,   but the part that produces the fruit is not  attributed to the farmer in the passage. I think we fall into an extreme where we  either think it's all about what we know   or it's all about what God does. In the passage,  the farmer scatters, but the soil produces.   The dirty little secret (if I can use that  phrase) of the kingdom of God that Jesus   is comparing to a seed is that your  destiny will be revealed in the dirt. What do I mean? The disappointment,   the insecurity, the rejection, and the trouble.  Check it out. It spells dirt. The disappointment,   the insecurity, the rejection, and the trouble.  This would be an excellent lesson on its own   because it illustrates principles that  will apply to any area of our lives.   Right here we could tell you  to make lemonade out of lemons. Right here we could tell you it doesn't  matter how many times you fall down.   You know, get knocked down nine, get up ten.  We could say anything we want right here,   and the principle would be powerful. But  this is not a principle; this is a parable.   A parable is a picture that appears simple  on the surface but carries a deeper meaning. When I read the passage two years ago, I thought  the farmer was Jesus and the seed was the Word   of God. The problem with this interpretation of  the parable, upon further reflection and study,   is that Jesus can't be the farmer  because the farmer doesn't know how.   Jesus is the wisdom of God. So to compare Jesus  to the farmer who scatters the seed is to miss   the parable that is beneath the principle. The principle is "Don't let what you  don't know stop you from sowing,"   but the parable, the picture Jesus is painting is  of something that hasn't happened yet. Everyone   around him in his inner circle, which  he has just selected in Mark, chapter 3…   Everyone around him is trying their best  to keep him from going to the cross. For him to go to the cross means the death of  the movement he came to initiate, in their eyes.   So when he stood before the judges,  both the Jewish Sanhedrin and the Roman   government prelates, he was silent as a sheep  before the shearers. Everything in those   disciples wanted to see Jesus come down from  the cross to avoid being buried in the grave,   but Jesus stood before Pilate and allowed  those accusations to be heaped on him,   although he was innocent, because he  knew the dirt had a purpose to fulfill. As he stood before those who accused him,  condemned him, and sentenced him to die,   he could have stopped it, and he could have called  for legions of angels to come and rescue him   from the rejection, but this is what he came for.   He said with his silence something  that is illustrated in the parable. He said, "Let the dirt do its work,   because if they accuse me, then my Father in  heaven doesn't have to accuse you. I'm going   to take your accusations and your shame. I, the  innocent, am going to absorb your punishment   so that you, the guilty, can go free." So when  they heaped their accusations on him, he took it. When he died on the cross and they took him down  and buried him in the grave, he did not resist the   burial. Instead, he stayed dead three days to let  the dirt do its work. We thought we were attending   a funeral, but really it was an agricultural  lesson. Jesus was not buried on Friday;   he was planted. Because he was planted on Friday,  there is the expectation of harvest. He is the   firstborn among many brethren. When he lay in  the grave it wasn't over; it was just beginning. I came to declare today to everybody who's  been going through a season of failure   or depression or uncertainty or rejection or  disappointment, "Let the dirt do its work."   Don't fight it, don't run from it, and don't pluck  up the seed because you don't like the season. Let   the dirt do its work. This is the gospel of Jesus  Christ. This is what the kingdom of God is like. There's nothing man can do to you that God  cannot use for his good. I believe that.   I believe that all things work together  for the good of them that love the Lord   and are called according to his purpose, but I   don't always know how. But I don't  have to know how, because I know who.