The Mustard Plant
Mark 4:30-32
And he said, Whereunto shall we liken the kingdom of God? or with what comparison shall we compare it?…


As I was riding across the plain of Akka, on the way to Carmel, I perceived, at some distance from the path, what seemed to be a little forest or nursery of trees. I turned aside to examine them. On coming nearer, they proved to be an extensive field of the plant (mustard) I was so anxious to see. It was then in blossom, full grown, in some cases six, seven, and nine feet high, with a stem or trunk an inch or more in thickness, throwing out branches on every side. I was now satisfied in part. I felt that such a plant might well be called a tree, and, in comparison with the seed producing it, a great tree. But still the branches, or stems of the branches, were not very large, nor, apparently, very strong. Can the birds, I said to myself, rest upon them? Are they not too slight and flexible? Will they not bend or break beneath the superadded weight? At that very instant, as I stood and revolved the thought, lo! one of the fowls of heaven stopped in its flight through the air, alighted down on one of the branches, which hardly moved beneath the shock, and then began, perched there before my eyes, to warble forth a strain of the richest music. All my doubts were now charmed away. I was delighted at the incident. It seemed to me at the moment as if I enjoyed enough to repay me for all the trouble of the whole journey.

(H. B. Hackett, D. D.)



Parallel Verses
KJV: And he said, Whereunto shall we liken the kingdom of God? or with what comparison shall we compare it?

WEB: He said, "How will we liken the Kingdom of God? Or with what parable will we illustrate it?




The Maxims of Human Philosophy not So Productive as Divine Truth
Top of Page
Top of Page