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The Parable of the Sower: A Godly Play for Understanding the Growth of Faith, Study notes of English Literature

Instructions for conducting a religious storytelling session based on the Parable of the Sower from the New Testament. It includes background information, materials needed, and steps for telling the story using props and actions. The parable illustrates the different ways seeds can grow or fail to grow, representing the challenges and successes of faith.

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Uploaded on 09/27/2022

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The Parable of the Sower
Background
Focus: the sower and the seed (Matthew 13:1-9)
This parable is found in all three synoptic gospels and in Thomas (Mark 4:1-9, Matthew 13:1-9,
Luke 8:4-8, Gospel of Thomas 9). The parable, which describes Jesus’ promise of abundant
harvest, is followed by an allegory that expresses the concerns of the first century Church.
Material
The gold box for The Parable of the Sower is on the New Testament shelves.
It contains:
a brown felt underlay
a paper sower
6 paper birds in box
paper rocks
paper thorns
paper furrows
3 paper grain sacks
Movements
Go to the shelf and pick up the
box containing the materials.
Bring it to the circle.
Sit back and reflect for a
moment about what might be
inside.
Words
Watch where I go to get this material.
Look, this box is the color gold. There may be a parable
inside because parables are as valuable, or even more
valuable, than gold.
The box also looks like a present. Parables are present.
They were given to you before you were born. They are
yours, even if you don’t know what they are.
This box looks old, and parables are old. Maybe there
really is one inside.
pf3
pf4
pf5

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The Parable of the Sower

Background

Focus: the sower and the seed (Matthew 13:1-9)

This parable is found in all three synoptic gospels and in Thomas (Mark 4:1-9, Matthew 13:1-9, Luke 8:4-8, Gospel of Thomas 9). The parable, which describes Jesus’ promise of abundant harvest, is followed by an allegory that expresses the concerns of the first century Church.

Material

The gold box for The Parable of the Sower is on the New Testament shelves.

It contains: a brown felt underlay a paper sower 6 paper birds in box paper rocks paper thorns paper furrows 3 paper grain sacks

Movements

Go to the shelf and pick up the box containing the materials. Bring it to the circle.

Sit back and reflect for a moment about what might be inside.

Words

Watch where I go to get this material.

Look, this box is the color gold. There may be a parable inside because parables are as valuable, or even more valuable, than gold.

The box also looks like a present. Parables are present. They were given to you before you were born. They are yours, even if you don’t know what they are.

This box looks old, and parables are old. Maybe there really is one inside.

Sit for a moment.

Move the box from in front of you to your side. Remove the lid and lean it up on the box on the side where the children are sitting. This will help them keep focused on what is being presented rather than what is to come out of the box.

Take out the underlay. Leave it folded in the middle of the circle. As you talk about it, begin to smooth it out.

Take the sower out of the box and place her on the underlay at your right facing toward the children.

Move the sower along the brown underlay, scooping seeds from her basket with your hand and sowing them along the underlay from your right to left. The sower stops.

Do you see the lid? It is like a closed door. Sometimes parables seem closed to us, even if we are ready to enter them. You need to keep coming back for them, and one day they will open.

I know what let’s do. Let’s look inside to see if there is a parable there

I wonder what this could really be? It doesn’t look like much now. Hmmm. It certainly is brown. It is all brown. Everywhere there is anything, there is brown.

Let’s see if there is anything else in the box that can help us get the parable ready.

There are many things here to help us tell the parable, but nothing else to help us get ready. All we can do then is begin.

There once was someone who did such amazing things and said such wonderful things that people followed him. As they followed him, they heard him speaking about a kingdom. The kingdom was not like the one they were in. It was not like one that anyone had ever visited. It was not like any kingdom anyone had even heard about. So they had to ask him, “What is the kingdom of heaven like?”

One day when they asked him that, he said, “The kingdom of heaven is like when a sower, someone who scatters seeds, goes out and scatters seeds along the path.

Move your flat hand across the top of the strip of good earth, to show the cutting off of the ripe grain during the harvest.

Take out of the parable box the three sacks of grain and place them from your right to your left in ascending order of size. “Fill” them by scooping up the harvest with your hand and pouring it into the sacks.

Pause for a moment after placing the containers of the harvest. Prepare yourself for the wondering. When you and the children are ready, begin.

Move the sower to the middle.

Move the sower from your right to left as you wonder.

When they were all grown up, they were ripe for the harvest. Then they were cut off and gathered up.

The harvest was thirty, sixty, and one hundred bushels.”

 I wonder if this person has a name?

 I wonder who the person could really be?

 I wonder if the person was happy when the birds came and ate the seeds?

 I wonder if the birds were happy when they saw the sower?

 I wonder if the birds have names?

 I wonder what the person was doing when the little seeds could not get their roots among the stones?

 I wonder what the person was doing when the little seeds were choked by the thorns?

Move the strip of thorns above the strip of stones and then put the good earth above the thorns. Then move the smallest sack to the left of the stones, the medium sack to the left of the thorns, and the large sack to the left of the good earth.

Put the small sack by the good earth, the medium sack by the stones, and the large basket by the thorns. Continue switching the grain sacks until all combinations are completed.

Move everything back to its place. Then move the grain sacks to the middle between you and the soil strips. Touch each sack as you wonder.

When the wondering draws to a close, place the pieces back into the parable box. Name each piece as you put it away.

Take the parable box back to its shelf and return to the circle. Help the children decide what work they will get out.

 I wonder what the person was doing when the little seeds were growing in the good earth?

 I wonder what the harvest could really be?

 Was it like this?

 Or could it really be like this?

 I wonder what the sower used for seed?

 I wonder what the sower sold?

 I wonder what the sower kept for food?

 I wonder if the sower was surprised at the harvest?

 I wonder what part surprised the sower the most?

Jerome W. Berryman, The Complete Guide to Godly Play Volume 3: 20 Presentations for Winter (2002), pp. 102-108.