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"description": "Notes on Matthew 13:44-52",
"path": "/monday-after-trinity-sunday/",
"publishedAt": "2026-06-01T09:17:05.000Z",
"site": "https://www.parrott.ink",
"textContent": "## Readings\n\n * Ecclesiastes 2:1–15\n * Galatians 1:1–17\n * Matthew 13:44–52\n * Psalms: 41, 52; 44\n\n\n\n## Matthew 13:44–52\n\n\"The kingdom of heaven is like treasure hidden in a field, which a man found and reburied; then in his joy he goes and sells all that he has and buys that field.\n\n\"Again, the kingdom of heaven is like a merchant in search of fine pearls; on finding one pearl of great value, he went and sold all that he had and bought it.\n\n\"Again, the kingdom of heaven is like a net that was thrown into the sea and caught fish of every kind; when it was full, they drew it ashore, sat down, and put the good into baskets but threw out the bad. So it will be at the end of the age. The angels will come out and separate the evil from the righteous and throw them into the furnace of fire, where there will be weeping and gnashing of teeth.\"\n\n\"Have you understood all this?\" They answered, \"Yes.\"\n\nAnd he said to them, \"Therefore every scribe who has become a disciple in the kingdom of heaven is like the master of a household who brings out of his treasure what is new and what is old.\"\n\n## Notes\n\nFour short parables, closing out the parable section of Matthew 13.\n\n**Verses 44–46. Treasure and pearl.** Two parables with the same shape. Someone finds something, recognizes its worth, and _sells everything_ to acquire it. The _New Interpreter's Bible_ commentary uses a good word for these stories: _unaccountable_. Not in the sense of being responsible to no one. In the sense that _an accountant_ could not make sense of the decisions. You sold the farm to buy a field? You liquidated all your assets for _one pearl_? Are you out of your mind?!\n\nThat, evidently, is what response to the kingdom looks like. I love verse 44: _in his joy_ he goes and sells all he has. There is a _rashness_ , a _recklessness_ , a giddiness in the move. Discovering the kingdom is not a sober calculation. It is closer to falling in love. People in love do impractical things and do not regret them.\n\nNotice the two modes of finding. The man in verse 44 _stumbles_ on the treasure. The merchant in verse 45 has been _searching_. The kingdom finds people both ways.\n\n**Verses 47–50. The dragnet.** The third parable is the warning, paralleling Thursday's wheat and weeds. A net is thrown into the sea and catches _every kind of fish_. The sorting happens at shore. Good fish (_kalos_ , wholesome) go into baskets; bad fish (meaning spoiled, unclean, or simply not edible) are thrown out.\n\nThe interpretive frame is identical to the wheat and weeds. Sorting at _the end of the age_. We have worked through this language: _aiōn_ , the bounded age that ends, not infinite duration. The same caveats apply.\n\n_Furnace of fire_. This image gets read almost reflexively as eternal conscious torment, but the Hebrew Bible and the early Christian tradition use furnace and fire imagery often as _purifying_. The refining texts in the Hebrew Bible work this way: Malachi 3:2–3 (the refiner's fire), Isaiah 48:10 (refined as silver), Zechariah 13:9 (refining the people through fire), Daniel 11:35 (the wise refined). Paul uses it the same way at 1 Corinthians 3:13: the day will test what each has built, _with fire_ , and what survives, survives. Revelation 3:18 invites the lukewarm church to buy _gold refined by fire_. And in Daniel 3, when the three men are thrown into the furnace, the presence of God shows up _in the furnace with them_. Fire in scripture is not always a metaphor for annihilation. It is often a metaphor for _purification that hurts but heals_.\n\n**Verses 51–52. Treasures new and old.** Jesus asks the disciples if they have understood. They say yes. Then the closing image: _every scribe who has become a disciple in the kingdom of heaven is like the master of a household who brings out of his treasure what is new and what is old._\n\nThe disciple-scribe is not new-only or old-only. _Both._ The Hebrew Bible and the kingdom teaching of Jesus. The tradition and the new thing the Spirit is doing. The good disciple has both in the storeroom and knows when to bring out which.\n\n## Questions for reflection\n\n _\"In his joy he goes and sells all he has.\" Where in your life have you been calculating the cost of following Jesus carefully, when the gospel says the response to the kingdom is_ joy _and a kind of holy recklessness?_\n\n_A scribe-disciple brings out treasure both new and old. Where are you stuck in one register, clinging only to the old or chasing only the new, when both belong in the storeroom?_",
"title": "Monday after Trinity Sunday",
"updatedAt": "2026-06-01T09:17:05.185Z"
}