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Growing Your Seed - Bishop Tudor Bismark sermon

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Sermon title:...........Growing your seed
Speaker:.................Bishop Tudor Bismark
Recorded Live at TREM INTERNATIONAL HQTR during Kingdom life world conference
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Bishop Tudor Bismark Bio:
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Bishop Tudor Bismark is the founder and senior pastor of New Life Covenant Church in Harare, Zimbabwe, the headquarters church for Jabula New Life Ministries International, a church he co-founded 1989 with his wife, Pastor Chichi Bismark.

Bishop Tudor and his wife, Pastor Chichi Bismark, serve as the senior pastors of New Life Covenant Church in Harare, Zimbabwe, the headquarters church for Jabula New Life Ministries International. Bishop Bismark also serves as the Chairman of the Council of African Apostles, a wholly African initiative to bring the key apostolic voices of the African church to bear on uniquely African issues.


Sermon summary:

—Into what will it grow?
Growth begins with the sowing of seed. That is true in the vegetable kingdom of the earth. It is also true in the spiritual kingdom of Heaven. It's amazing how you can change your life simply by paying attention to the spiritual seed you sow daily. The Lord knows this, so he says...

"Do not be deceived. God is not mocked. For whatever a person sows, this will that person also reap. For those who sow to their own flesh, shall reap corruption from the flesh. But the one who sows to the Spirit, shall reap eternal life from the Spirit" (Galatians 6:7-10)

The "fruit of the Spirit" give us a general idea of the kind of seed we should sow (Galatians 5:22-23).

1 A Seed is Small
A seed is a very small thing, compared to the plant and the harvest it produces. The parable of the mustard seed points this out (Matthew 13:31-32, cf 17:20).

Christianity is not necessarily a religion of big, heroic deeds. It may sometimes require them, and the suffering of Christ on the cross exemplifies them.

However, it is things which are small in the eyes of the world, yet which even the world may value, that are the stuff of everyday Christian living, and of the Christian's development.

Have you ever wondered why there are so many commandments in the Bible that are small things to ask of us? There are only a few big asks, but such a lot of small things. For example...

"Greet one another with a holy kiss" (Romans 16:16).
"Comfort [encourage] one another" (1Thessalonians 5:11)).
"Seek what is good for one another and for all men" (1Thessalonians 5:15).
"...pray for one another" (James 5:16).
"Use hospitality toward one another without grumbling" (1Peter 4:9).
You could add many more small things to that list. Things such as these are small seeds that we can sow day by day.

2 A Seed is Ordinary
Of course some small things are highly valued, a pearl for example may be of great price. A seed, however, is a very ordinary thing. People don't pay much regard to a seed because it is not only small but ordinary.

Christians don't have to do extraordinary things. To talk clean and avoid coarse or blasphemous language is not very extraordinary. To show gratitude with a kiss, or a smile, or a gift, or even just a thank you, is not very extraordinary. Yet these acts are little seeds that you can sow each day, and the harvest later on may well be extraordinary.

To illustrate this principle, consider someone you know who works hours and hours every week, without wages, for the benefit of others. This person may be be doing tasks like washing, ironing, cooking, cleaning, ferrying and fetching kids to and from school, babysitting, shopping, running errands. The lack of pay does not make such a person unhappy. But a lack of gratitude will certainly cause unhappiness.

A happy home and family does not result from ingratitude and taking someone for granted, any more than a desirable harvest can come from failing to sow good seed. A happy and contented family is the fruit of sowing abundantly good seed like gratitude.

It's such an ordinary thing to "be thankful" but what a difference it makes at home, work, church, school, and so forth (Colossians 3:12-25).

As further illustrations, it might be very ordinary to put aside a small amount of your money to help a child, in a third-world nation, to get an education or medical aid. It might be very unremarkable to give some of your time and labor to help others with some responsibility important to them, but which they cannot handle alone.

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