“Another parable spake he unto them; The kingdom
of heaven is like unto
leaven, which a woman took,
and hid in three measures of meal, till
the whole was leavened.
In the mustard-seed we saw the kingdom
growing great by its inherent vitality; in the leaven
we see it growing great by a contagious influence.
There, the increase was attained by development from
within; here, by acquisitions from without. It
is not that there are two distinct ways in which the
Gospel may gain complete possession of a man, or Christianity
gain complete possession of the world; but that the
one way in which the work advances is characterized
by both these features, and consequently two pictures
are required to exhibit both sides of the same thing.
The thought which is peculiar to this
parable, the specific lesson which it teaches, is,
the power of the Gospel, acting like contagion, to
penetrate, assimilate, and absorb the world in which
it lies. The kingdom grows great by permeating
in secret through the masses, changing them gradually
into its own nature, and appropriating them to itself.
The material frame-work which contains
the spiritual lesson here is, in its main features,
easily understood. Immediately below the surface,
indeed, lie some hard questions; but all that is necessary
is easy, and the discussion of difficulties, although
it may well repay the labour, is by no means essential.
The chief use of leaven in the preparation
of bread is, as I understand, to produce a mechanical
effect. A certain chemical change is caused in
the first instance by fermentation in the nature of
the fermented substance, and for the sake of that
change the process is in certain other manufactures
introduced; but along with the chemical change which
takes place in the nature of the substance, a mechanical
change is also effected in its form, and for the sake
of this latter and secondary result fermentation is
resorted to in the baking of bread. The moist,
soft, yet dense mass of dough, is by fermentation thrown
into the form of a sponge. Owing to the consistence
of the material, the openings made by the ferment
remain open, and consequently the lump, which would
otherwise have been solid, is penetrated in every direction
by an innumerable multitude of small cavities.
Through these the heat in the oven obtains equal access
to every portion of the dough; and thus, though the
loaf is of considerable thickness, it is not left raw
in the heart. Other methods, essentially different
from fermentation, are in modern practice adopted
in the preparation of bread; but by whatever means
channels may be opened for the admission of heat to
every particle of the dough, the result is practically
the same as that which is obtained by leavening.
The operator converts the mass of solid dough into
swollen, light, porous, spongy leaven, by introducing
into it a small quantity of matter already in a state
of fermentation. It is the nature of that substance
or principle to infect the portion that lies next
it; and thus, if the contiguous matter be a susceptible
conductor like moistened flour, it spreads until it
has converted the whole mass. The knowledge of
this process is not so universal amongst us as it was
then in Galilee, or is still in many countries, because
baking by fermentation, especially in the northern
division of the island, is not much practised in private
families. In countries where bread is prepared
by that method, and every family prepares its own,
the process is, of course, universally familiar.
The three measures of meal, which
together make an ephah, were the understood quantity
of an ordinary batch in the economics of a family,
and as such are several times incidentally mentioned
in the Scriptures of the Old Testament. See,
for example, the preparation of bread by Sarah, as
it is narrated in Gen. xviii. The various suggestions
which inquirers have made regarding the specific significance
of the three measures of meal, are interesting
and instructive. As they do not directly traverse
the lines of the analogy, they are entitled to a respectful
hearing; but the subject is subordinate, and the meaning
must ever be comparatively obscure. Whether the
three measures are understood to point to the three
continents of the world then known, or to the three
sons of Noah by whom the world was peopled, or to spirit,
soul, and body, the constituent elements of human
nature, an interesting and useful conception is obtained.
Each of these suggestions contains a truth, and that,
too, a truth which is germane to the main lesson of
the parable.
The same historic incidents which
show that three measures were the ordinary quantity,
show also that the women of the house were the ordinary
operators. Baking the bread of the household was
accounted women’s work; as men ploughed and
sowed in the field, women kneaded and baked at the
oven. An inversion of this order would have been
noticed as incongruous, and presented a difficulty.
Exceptions may be found, both in ancient and modern
times, but the representation in the text proceeds
obviously upon the ordinary habits of society.
On this account, although I willingly listen to interesting
and ingenious speculations regarding the significance
of the woman who hid the leaven among the meal, I
cannot accept them as the foundation of any positive
doctrine. I am jealous, not without cause, of
ecclesiastical tendencies and prepossessions in the
interpretation of the parables. It is quite true
that both in the discourses of the Lord and in the
epistles of his followers, reference is made sometimes
to the community or communities of believers constituted
as a Church; but the Church in the Scriptures is a
much simpler affair than it is in ecclesiastical history.
Moreover, in these lessons which were taught by the
Lord in the beginning of the Gospel, we find much
about the individual man, and about the aggregate
of mankind, but little about the Church in its visible
organization. Accordingly, while I endeavour
to keep my mind open for everything that the Scriptures
bring to the Church, I am disposed to shut the door
hard against anything that I suspect the Church is
bringing to the Scriptures. When the woman who
kneaded the dough, and the woman who lost and found
the silver coin, come forward, backed by much learned
authority, saying, We are the Church, I stand on my
guard against deception, and carefully examine their
credentials. A man took the mustard-seed and
sowed it in his field; a woman took the leaven and
hid it in three measures of meal. The two parables
are in this respect strictly parallel; in both alike
an ordinary act in rural economy is performed, and
in either it is performed by a person of the appropriate
sex. The converse would have been startling and
inexplicable. Whatever the operator may represent
in the sowing of the seed, the operator in the hiding
of the leaven represents the same. To neglect
the strict parallelism between the two cases, and
attribute some meaning to the selection of a woman
as the operator in the one, which the selection of
a man in the other does not convey, is, as I apprehend
the matter, to forsake the main track of the analogy,
and follow by-paths which lead to no useful result.
The same divine hand that dropped the word of eternal
life as a mustard-seed into the ground, also hid the
word of eternal life as leaven in the ephah of flour.
Looking to the spiritual significance of the two parables,
we have in both cases the same act, and in both cases,
therefore, the same actor.
A question of deep interest and considerable
difficulty arises from the fact that here, and here
only, the greatest good the kingdom of God
in the world is unequivocally compared
to leaven, whereas this similitude, in all other places
of Scripture where it occurs, either stands indefinitely
for progress of any kind, or expressly represents the
energy of evil. I assume without argument that
in this parable the diffusion of leaven through the
mass represents the diffusion of good in the world,
although here and there, both in ancient and modern
times, an inquirer appears who understands the leaven
in this place to predict the prevalence of false doctrines
and practices in the Church. This interpretation
no man would voluntarily adopt in the first instance,
for it is obviously incongruous with the signification
of the kingdom in every other parable of the group;
but some have permitted themselves to be driven into
it by a difficulty that threatens on the opposite side.
Because in other portions of Scripture they find leaven
employed as an emblem of evil, they think themselves
obliged to take it as a representative of evil here.
But the difficulty which is presented by the use of
a type to denote good, which is elsewhere employed
to denote evil, must be fairly met and explained:
to escape an imaginary difficulty we must not plunge
into a real mistake. I am convinced that here,
as in many similar cases, that which at first sight
and on the surface wears the appearance of harshness,
will be found, on fuller consideration, to contain
a new beauty, and impart additional power.
It is obvious, in the first place,
from the references made to it both by the Lord and
his apostles, and especially from the iteration of
the same maxim by Paul in two distinct epistles, that
the similitude was current and familiar among the
people as a proverb. It is conceded, that apart
from this parable, wherever its application is expressly
indicated, it is employed to designate the progress
of evil; but it ought to be borne in mind that Paul
has twice, in the same words, enunciated the universal
proposition, “A little leaven leaveneth the
whole lump” (1 Cor. ; Gal. .
By expressly mentioning the leaven of malice and wickedness
in connection with this proposition, he leaves room
for the supposition that there may be also a leaven
of truth and holiness. In like manner, the Lord
in another place warns his followers to beware of
the leaven of the Pharisees, which is hypocrisy; but
he nowhere says that leaven is hypocrisy. Leaven
does, indeed, illustrate the method in which falsehood
spreads; but it may, for aught that is said in the
Scriptures, illustrate also the manner in which truth
advances, when it has gotten a footing in the world
or in a man. If truth and error, though opposite
in their nature, are like each other in their tendency
to advance, as if by contagion; and if error is in
this respect like leaven, then truth must be in this
respect like leaven too. When two things are
in a certain aspect like each other, and one of them
is in the same aspect like a third thing, the other
must also be like that third thing, provided the point
of view remain unchanged. Leaven represents evil
not in its nature, but only in the manner of its progress;
and in this respect the symbol is equally applicable
to the opposite good.
This argument, indeed, may be carried
one step further. It is not enough to show that
no loss of meaning is sustained by the application
of this analogy to a new and opposite class of facts;
a positive gain thereby accrues. The circumstance
that in all other places of Scripture in which the
symbolical meaning of leaven is specifically applied,
it is, in point of fact, employed to designate the
progress of evil, instead of obscuring, rather reflects
additional light on the comparison as it is used in
this parable. The Teacher who speaks here is sovereign.
By him the worlds were made, and by him redemption
wrought. In both departments he executes his
own will: when he speaks, he speaks with authority.
Observing that the principle which ordinarily enters
and pervades human hearts is evil, a leaven of hypocrisy,
he does not submit to that state of things as necessary
and permanent: this is, indeed, the condition
of the world; but he has come to change it. Such
is the direction of the current, and the proverb which
compares moral evil to a leaven correctly describes
its insinuating and persevering course; but here is
one who has power to turn the river of water so that
it shall flow backward to its source. Corruption
has, indeed, spread through the world as leaven spreads
through the dough, but here is Truth incarnate, another
leaven, introduced into the mass, having power to
saturate all with good, and thereby ultimately to
cast forth evil from the world. The kingdom of
darkness, for example, comes secretly, the
wiles of the devil constitute his policy and secure
his success; the kingdom of God, although opposite
in essence, is similar in the method of its advance,
for it “cometh not with observation.”
The wheat and the darnel were opposite in character
and consequences as light and darkness, but they were
precisely alike in the manner of their growth.
The loyal army adopts the same tactics which the rebels
employ, while it strives to defend the throne which
they are leagued to overthrow.
Thus, it is not enough to say that
although the diffusion of evil in God’s intelligent
creatures is like the diffusion of leaven in the dough,
Jesus may notwithstanding employ the same analogy to
indicate how grace grows: we may proceed further
and affirm, as Stier has ingeniously suggested, that
because evil has often been compared to leaven in the
manner of its advance, Jesus adopts that similitude
to illustrate the aggressive, pervasive power of the
truth.
Boldly, as a sovereign may, this Teacher
seizes a proverb which was current as an exponent
of the adversaries’ successful stratagems, and
stamps the metal with the image and superscription
of the rightful King. The evil spreads like leaven;
you tremble before its stealthy advance and relentless
grasp: but be of good cheer, disciples of Jesus,
greater is He that is for you than all that are against
you; the word of life which has been hidden in the
world, hidden in believing hearts, is a leaven too.
The unction of the Holy One is more subtle and penetrating
and subduing than sin and Satan. Where sin abounded
grace shall much more abound.
The appropriation by Christ and to
his kingdom of a similitude which had previously been
applied in an opposite sense may be illustrated by
many parallel examples in the Scriptures.Of these,
as far as I know, the different and opposite
figurative significations of the serpent
are the most striking and appropriate. The conception
of secret motion, followed in due time by a surely
planted effectual stroke, which is associated with
the faculties and habits of a serpent, Christ found
appropriated as a type to express the power of evil:
but he did not permit it to remain so appropriated;
he spoiled the Egyptian of this jewel, and in as far
as it possessed value, enriched with it his own Israel.
The serpent, as a metaphor, was in practice as completely
thirled to the indication of evil as leaven had been,
but Jesus counselled his disciples to “be wise
as serpents.” A similar example occurs in
the parable of the unjust steward: it teaches
that the skill of the wicked in doing evil should be
imitated by Christians in doing good. Christ acts
as king and conqueror. He strips the slain enemy
of his sharpest weapons, and therewith girds his own
faithful followers. Whatever wisdom and power
may have been employed against them, wisdom and power
inconceivably greater are wielded on their side.
We shall be better prepared to appreciate
for practical purposes the peculiar meaning which
the symbol bears in this parable if we advert, in
the first place, to its ordinary meaning in other parts
of Scripture. Both in the typical worship of
the Old Testament and in the doctrinal teaching of
the New, leaven is ordinarily employed to denote the
insinuating, contagious advance of sin. When the
Hebrews were instructed to cast all leaven out of
their houses during the solemnities of the Passover,
their lawgiver meant to teach them by type that in
worshipping God through his ordinances they should
cast all malice and wickedness out of their hearts.
In like manner, when the great Teacher warned his
followers to beware of the leaven of the Pharisees
and of the Sadducees, he meant that they should eschew
on the one hand the lie of self-righteous superstition,
and on the other the lie of libertine unbelief.
The Apostle Paul, too, while he does not forbid another
use, employs the conception, in point of fact, to
illustrate the presence and power of sin.
Evil is a mysterious, self-propagating
principle, like leaven. In the fact of the fall
a piece of this leaven was hidden in the mass, and
all mankind have consequently become corrupted.
The leaven of sin that touched humanity at the first
has infected the whole. The fact of a universal
corruption appears in all history, and its origin is
explained in the beginning of Genesis. The whole
lump has been leavened: break off a bit at any
place, at any time, and you will find it tainted.
“The innocence of childhood” is a fond,
false phrase, employed to conceal the terrible reality:
there is no innocence, no purity, except that which
comes through the gift of God, the sacrifice of Christ,
and the ministry of the Spirit.
Idolatry, for example, is a leaven
that must have been small in its beginning, but at
a very early date it had grown great. The world
was idolatrous when Abraham was called out to become
the nucleus of a religious nation; and even his descendants,
though constituted as a commonwealth expressly for
the purpose of maintaining the worship of the true
God while all the world beside had sunk into idolatry,
were, through contact with the contaminating leaven,
frequently overrun by the same sin. It became
necessary that they should be poured from vessel to
vessel, and tried as by fire, in order to keep them
separate.
Small and apparently harmless Popery
began: with the power and perseverance of a principle
in nature it spread and defiled the Church. How
completely that leaven penetrated the lump may be seen
everywhere throughout Europe, in the architecture,
sculpture, paintings, in the laws, habits,
and language that have come down from the middle ages
to our own day. The evil spirit of the Papacy
has intruded into every place; into the councils of
kings, into the laws of nations, into the births,
marriages, and deaths of the people. Between ruler
and subject, between husband and wife, between parent
and child, comes the priest, gliding in like water
through seamy walls, sapping their foundations.
Into the inmost heart of maid, wife, mother, creeps
the confessional, tainting, souring, defiling society
in its springs, a leaven of malice and
wickedness, a leaven at once of Pharisee and Sadducee,
a superstition that believes everything in alliance
with a scepticism that believes nothing, and all combined
to conceal the salvation of God and enslave the spirits
of men. Beware of the leaven of the Papacy.
Other things of grosser and more material
mould follow the law of leaven in their progress from
small to great, until they obtain the mastery of a
community or a man. Such, for example, are the
use of ardent spirits in Scotland and the use of opium
in China. A hundred years ago how small was either
bit! but being a bit of leaven, when it is once introduced
it creeps stealthily forward, the appetite growing
by what it feeds on, until it dominates, and in some
cases utterly destroys. These creeping leavens
stain the beauty and waste the strength of nations.
Some tribes of Indians in North America have been
annihilated mainly by this process; and at this day
the Canadian Parliament, through a benevolent law,
sanctioned by the Sovereign, entirely prohibit the
sale of spirits to the Indians, and thus save from
extinction the remnants of the tribes that live under
our protection. Those subtile and powerful material
agents which create abnormal appetites and influence
the moral habits of a whole people, afford ample room
for gravest thought both to Christians and patriots.
The fact acknowledged in Scripture,
and manifest in all experience, that evil has transfused
itself through humanity like leaven, serves to bring
out in deeper relief the comforting converse truth
which Christ has embodied in this parable. The
universal diffusion of corruption in the world becomes
a dark ground whereon the Lord may more vividly portray
the progress and final triumph of holiness. Good
introduced among the good is not much noticed; but
when good assails, overcomes, and transforms evil,
its power and beauty are conspicuously displayed.
Employing the sad facts already stated as shadows filled
in to make the lines of light more visible, I shall
proceed now to express and enforce positively some
of the practical lessons which the parable contains.
1. Christ, the Son of God, became
man and dwelt among us. Behold the piece of leaven
that has been plunged into the dead mass of the world!
“In him was life, and the life was the light
of men” (John . The whole is not leavened
yet, but the germ has been introduced. The meaning
of Immanuel is, “God with us:” the
incarnation is the link that binds the fallen to the
throne of God. One without sin and with omnipotence
has become our brother, has taken hold of
our nature, and will keep hold of it to the end.
He will not fail nor be discouraged. To him every
knee shall bow, and every tongue confess: the
prophecy has been written, and the history will follow.
In the meantime, while we wait for the accomplishment
of the promise, we may obtain from this parable some
glimpses of the method by which the change will be
effected at last.
Leaven consists in, or at least causes,
fermentation. The name suggests the mechanical
process of boiling. The most sublime and awful
scenes which nature has ever presented have been produced
in this way. When great masses are affected,
a boiling becomes unspeakably grand and terrible.
This earth, now so solid beneath, and so green on the
surface, seems to have been once a boiling mass.
Those mountains that cleave the clouds are the bubbles
that rose to the surface and were congealed ere they
had time to subside again: there they stand to-day,
monuments of the fact. The moral government of
God is like the natural. The Maker’s method,
when he would bring down the high things and exalt
the low, is to throw in an ingredient which will produce
fermentation. He can make the world of spirit
fervid as well as this material globe. The earth
is shaken by moral causes. The Gospel sends a
sword before it brings peace. Wars and rumours
of wars rend the nations, and make men’s hearts
melt within their breasts. In some cases it is
obviously Christian truth plunged into the mass that
agitates the nations; and if we were able to discern
the links of cause and effect a few degrees further
into the fringes of the cloud that encircles God’s
throne, we would perhaps see the same central fact
setting in motion more distant forces. Our life
is so short, and our range of vision so contracted,
that we cannot observe the progress which the kingdom
makes. Sometimes, and in some places, it seems
to recede; but when the end comes it will be seen that
every step of apparent retreat was the couching in
preparation for another spring. The kingdoms
of this world shall become the kingdoms of our Lord
and of his Christ. The captive’s chains
shall be broken, whether they bind more directly the
body or the soul, although the ancient political organizations
of Europe, and the more recent fabrics of America,
should be torn asunder and tossed away in the process,
as foam is tossed from the crest of a wave upon the
shore. “Thou shalt break them with a rod
of iron; thou shalt dash them in pieces like a potter’s
vessel. Be wise now therefore, O ye kings; be
instructed, ye judges of the earth. Serve the
Lord with fear, and rejoice with trembling. Kiss
the Son, lest he be angry, and ye perish from the
way, when his wrath is kindled but a little.
Blessed are all they that put their trust in him”.
2. Converted men, women, and
children are let into openings of corrupt humanity,
and hidden in its heart. There they cannot lie
still: they stir, and effervesce, and inoculate
the portions with which they are in closest contact.
In this respect the lesson is the same with that which
is taught in those other short parables of Jesus, “Ye
are the light of the world. Ye are the salt of
the earth.”
Nor is the conception essentially
different from that of Christ or his word dropped
into the lump of humanity; for Christians have no life
and no expansive power, except in as far as Christ
dwells in their hearts by faith. They are vessels
which contain the truth, and when these vessels are
hidden under the folds of families and larger communities,
the word of life, which is within them, touches and
tells upon their neighbours.
The most recent experience of the
Church exhibits the kingdom spreading like leaven,
as vividly, perhaps, as any experience since apostolic
times. By contact with one soul, already fervid
with new life, other souls, hitherto dead, become
fervid too. One sinner saved, his heart burning
within his breast, as he consciously communes with
his Saviour, touches a meeting and sets it all aglow;
the prayer-meeting thus moved touches the congregation
and throws its settled lees into an unwonted and violent
commotion; this assembly, all throbbing with the cry,
What must we do to be saved? infects a city; and the
city so infected communicates its fervour to the land;
and a nation thus on fire kindles another by its far-reaching
sympathy beyond intervening seas. Thus some portions
of the world have been thrown into such a state of
effervescence, by the leaven of the Gospel hidden in
their heart, that for a time the sound of praise for
sin forgiven has risen in the highways and market-places,
louder than that other old, strong cry, What shall
we eat, and what shall we drink, and wherewithal shall
we be clothed?
The leaven, like gravitation, follows
the same law on smaller spheres that it follows on
the larger. Brother infects sister, and sister
brother; parent child, and child parent; shopman shopmate.
We often lament the contagious influence of evil,
and it is right that we should; but it is an unthankful,
unhopeful spirit, that thinks and speaks of the dark
side only. Oh, thou of little faith, wherefore
didst thou doubt? The new life which Christ has
brought into the world is a leaven too. Working
on the same method, but backed by a mightier power,
good will yet overcome evil, life will
destroy death. Life from the Lord and in the
Lord, though small at first as to the number of persons
whom it animates, will increase until it fill the
world. It will absorb surrounding death, and
in absorbing quicken it. He that sat upon the
throne said, “Behold, I make all things new”
(Rev. xx.
3. There is yet another branch
of the practical lesson which ought not to be overlooked:
The life of faith, when it is hidden in the heart,
spreads like leaven through the man, occupying and
assimilating all the faculties of his nature and all
the course of his life. The whole lump of the
individual must be leavened, as well as the whole lump
of the world. Christ will not be satisfied until
he get every man in the world for his own, and every
part of each. Whatever amount of ground there
may be for the judgment of some expositors that the
three measures of meal in the parable represent spirit,
soul, and body, the constituents of human nature,
certain it is that if the leaven of the kingdom is
deposited in the heart, it will not cease until it
has interpenetrated the human trinity and conformed
all to the likeness of Christ. In the new creature,
as in the new world, “dwelleth righteousness.”
That which is now laid on the conscience of Christians
as a law will yet emerge from their life as a fact, “Whether
therefore ye eat or drink, or whatsoever ye do, do
all to the glory of God.”
From a circumstance not expressly
mentioned in the parable, but obviously contained
in the nature of the case, springs a thought of tender
and solemn import. The piece of leaven was hid
in the meal, and the whole quantity, in consequence,
was converted into leaven; but the leaven will not
spread through meal that is dry; the meal is not susceptible,
receptive, until it is saturated with water.
Within some persons, some families,
some congregations, some communities, the leaven of
truth has been deposited for a long time, and yet
they are not moved, they are not changed. The
leaven remains as it came, a stranger; all around,
notwithstanding its presence, is still, is dead.
It is when the Spirit is poured out as floods that
the leaven of the kingdom spreads with quickening,
assimilating power. I will pour out my Spirit
upon you, saith the Lord: the promise is sent
to generate the prayer, as a sound calls forth an
echo. Behold, I come quickly, says Christ:
Even so, come, Lord Jesus, respond Christians.
Catch the promise as it falls, and send it back like
an echo to heaven. I will pour out my Spirit
upon you: Pour out thy Spirit, Lord, on us, as
floods on the dry ground; so shall the word already
lying in our Bibles and our memories run and be glorified
in our life and through our land.