This is the most self-referential of all Jesus’s parables. It is a parable about how parables work — about what happens to truth when it lands on different kinds of people. The seed is identical in every case: the same Word, the same sower, the same sky. What differs is the soil. And the soil determines everything.

The parable appears in all three synoptic Gospels and is unique in one important way: Jesus explains it. He gives His disciples a verse-by-verse interpretation. That means we are not guessing at the meaning. We have the Author’s own commentary. This page gives you the full parable, the full explanation Jesus provided, what each soil type looks like in the 21st century, and a prayer for good soil.

The Parable of the Sower — Full Text with Jesus’s Explanation
Matthew 13:1–23 · KJV (condensed with explanation)

3And he spake many things unto them in parables, saying, Behold, a sower went forth to sow; 4And when he sowed, some seeds fell by the way side, and the fowls came and devoured them up: 5Some fell upon stony places, where they had not much earth: and forthwith they sprung up, because they had no deepness of earth: 6And when the sun was up, they were scorched; and because they had no root, they withered away.

7And some fell among thorns; and the thorns sprung up, and choked them: 8But other fell into good ground, and brought forth fruit, some an hundredfold, some sixtyfold, some thirtyfold. 9Who hath ears to hear, let him hear.

18Hear ye therefore the parable of the sower. 19When any one heareth the word of the kingdom, and understandeth it not, then cometh the wicked one, and catcheth away that which was sown in his heart. This is he which received seed by the way side.

20But he that received the seed into stony places, the same is he that heareth the word, and anon with joy receiveth it; 21Yet hath he not root in himself, but dureth for a while: for when tribulation or persecution ariseth because of the word, by and by he is offended.

22He also that received seed among the thorns is he that heareth the word; and the care of this world, and the deceitfulness of riches, choke the word, and he becometh unfruitful.

23But he that received seed into the good ground is he that heareth the word, and understandeth it; which also beareth fruit, and bringeth forth, some an hundredfold, some sixty, some thirty.

A Simple Explanation — What Is Jesus Actually Saying?

Jesus told this parable to a large crowd by the Sea of Galilee — so many people He had to get into a boat and teach from the water. In that crowd were casual onlookers, curious seekers, sincere disciples, hostile critics, and everything in between. The parable was describing that very crowd — the different kinds of people sitting in front of Him, receiving exactly the same words, and responding in four completely different ways.

The sower is generous and indiscriminate. He throws seed everywhere — on the path, on rocky ground, among thorns, on good soil. This is not careless farming by ancient standards; it was standard practice to sow first and plough after. The question the parable raises is not about the sower’s technique. It is entirely about what the seed lands on.

He that received seed into the good ground is he that heareth the word, and understandeth it; which also beareth fruit, and bringeth forth, some an hundredfold, some sixty, some thirty.

Matthew 13:23 · KJV

Jesus told the disciples that this parable is foundational: “Know ye not this parable? and how then will ye know all parables?” (Mark 4:13). Understanding how different hearts receive truth is the key to understanding everything else Jesus teaches. It explains why some people hear the gospel and are transformed, while others hear the same words and are completely untouched.

The central question

The parable does not ask whether the seed is good. It is. It does not ask whether the sower is faithful. He is. It asks: what kind of soil are you right now? And — crucially — soil can be changed. Hard ground can be broken up. Rocky ground can be cleared. Thorny ground can be weeded. The parable is not a verdict. It is a diagnosis with an invitation.

The Four Soils — Jesus’s Own Explanation

This is the only parable where Jesus provides a detailed, verse-by-verse interpretation. Each soil type is a specific kind of response to truth — and each is recognisable in real people and real situations today.

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Soil 1 — The Hard Path
What Happens

Seed falls on the compacted path — trampled ground beside the field. It sits on the surface and birds immediately eat it. It never penetrates at all.

Jesus’s Meaning

“When any one heareth the word of the kingdom, and understandeth it not, then cometh the wicked one, and catcheth away that which was sown in his heart.” (v.19)

🚫 No penetration
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Soil 2 — Rocky Ground
What Happens

Seed sprouts quickly in the thin topsoil — but the rock beneath prevents roots going deep. When sun comes, the plant scorches and dies.

Jesus’s Meaning

“He that heareth the word, and anon with joy receiveth it; yet hath he not root in himself, but dureth for a while: for when tribulation or persecution ariseth… he is offended.” (v.20–21)

⚡ Temporary response
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Soil 3 — Thorny Ground
What Happens

Seed germinates and grows — but so do the thorns. The competing growth chokes the plant before it can bear fruit.

Jesus’s Meaning

“He that received seed among the thorns is he that heareth the word; and the care of this world, and the deceitfulness of riches, choke the word, and he becometh unfruitful.” (v.22)

🌾 Growth choked out
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Soil 4 — Good Ground
What Happens

Seed finds deep, prepared, clear soil. It germinates, roots deeply, and produces fruit — 30, 60, or even 100 times what was planted.

Jesus’s Meaning

“He that received seed into the good ground is he that heareth the word, and understandeth it; which also beareth fruit, and bringeth forth, some an hundredfold, some sixty, some thirty.” (v.23)

✅ Fruit — 30, 60, 100×

Three Soils That Fail — and Why It Matters

One of the most sobering features of this parable is that three out of four soils fail to produce fruit. And all three failures receive the same seed. This is not about access to truth — it is about the condition of the heart that receives it.

The Hard Path — When Truth Never Penetrates

Footpaths become hard through repeated traffic. A heart becomes hard through repeated exposure to truth without response — or through pain, disappointment, and the deliberate decision to not let anything in. The hard-path person hears the word and dismisses it immediately, usually without realising they’ve done so. The bird takes the seed before it has any chance to sink in. This is not primarily intellectual rejection — it is a pre-cognitive hardness that keeps truth from landing at all.

The Rocky Ground — When Emotion Replaces Roots

The rocky-ground person is perhaps the most dangerous soil because it looks the most like faith. They respond with joy immediately. They are enthusiastic, emotional, genuinely moved. But the response is all surface. When difficulty arrives — and Jesus is specific that it will arrive — there is nothing to hold onto. The faith that requires easy circumstances to survive is not yet faith. It is inspiration. Roots only form under pressure, in the dark, working their way through resistance. Emotions without roots cannot survive a drought.

The Thorny Ground — When the World Chokes What Was Growing

The thorny-ground person is perhaps the most relatable in the 21st century. Something genuinely germinates. Faith begins. But life crowds in — financial pressure, career demands, relational complexity, entertainment, distraction, ambition. Jesus names two specific thorns: “the care of this world” and “the deceitfulness of riches.” These are not dramatic sins. They are ordinary preoccupations that gradually consume the bandwidth that faith needs. The plant doesn’t die violently. It is slowly, quietly choked.

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Real WorldModern-Day Scenarios — The Four Soils Today

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The Hard Path — Cynicism That Prevents Anything Landing
The person who has been hurt by the church, burned by religion, or simply hardened by years of disappointment with God. Every sermon, every conversation, every encounter with faith bounces off before it has a chance to penetrate. They often don’t know this is happening — the dismissal is automatic, pre-verbal. “I’ve heard this before. I know where this is going.” The hardness is understandable — it developed as protection. But it is now preventing the very thing that could heal what caused it. Hard ground is not permanent ground. The same plough that breaks the surface breaks the heart — but someone has to be willing to be ploughed.
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The Rocky Ground — The Conference High That Doesn’t Last the Drive Home
The person who has had dozens of spiritual high points — retreats, conferences, powerful sermons, prayer meetings — and has experienced genuine emotional breakthrough each time. But six weeks later, nothing has changed. And six weeks after the next one, nothing has changed again. The emotion was real. The impact was shallow. Rocky-ground faith is characterised by a cycle of inspiration and deflation, with the distance between peaks getting longer and the valleys getting harder to climb out of. The solution is not less emotion — it is deeper roots: regular, unglamorous practices of prayer, scripture, community, and accountability that form the structure beneath the surface.
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The Thorny Ground — The Genuinely Busy Person Whose Faith Got Crowded Out
This is the most common 21st-century soil type. Someone who would describe themselves as a Christian, who genuinely believes, who has a real faith history — but whose actual prayer life is thin, whose Bible reading happens occasionally, whose church attendance is sporadic, whose conversations about faith are almost nonexistent. Not because of rebellion. Because of busyness. The career, the children, the mortgage, the social media, the streaming service, the accumulation of small commitments that together leave no room for the thing that matters most. The thorns are not dramatic. They are ordinary. That is what makes them so effective at choking.
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The Good Soil — What It Actually Looks Like (Hint: It’s Not Perfect)
Good soil is not a person who never struggles, never doubts, and never gets distracted. It is a person who has created the conditions for the Word to take root: regular, consistent practices of prayer and scripture that happen even when they don’t feel spiritually significant. A community of people who tell them the truth. A willingness to let difficulty deepen roots rather than use it as an excuse to stop growing. And a long-term orientation — they are not looking for immediate fruit, they are looking for the 30, 60, or 100-fold harvest that takes years to develop. Good soil is less about spiritual intensity and more about faithful, consistent, humble receptivity over time.

What This Parable Teaches — 5 Key Lessons

  • 1
    The same truth produces completely different results depending on the soil. The sower is generous with seed. The Word is the same. The difference in outcome is entirely determined by the condition of the heart that receives it. This means that spiritual growth is not primarily about accessing better teaching — it is about tending the soil so that the teaching can actually take root.
  • 2
    Three of the four soils have something growing — only one bears fruit. This is uncomfortable. Germination — initial spiritual response — is not the same as fruitfulness. The rocky-ground person germinates with joy. The thorny-ground person grows for a season. But only the good-soil person produces fruit. The parable warns against equating spiritual experience or initial response with lasting, fruit-bearing faith.
  • 3
    Jesus names two specific thorns: worry and wealth. “The care of this world, and the deceitfulness of riches.” Not persecution. Not dramatic temptation. Ordinary preoccupation. The most common killer of faith in the 21st century is not hostility — it is busyness. The gradual crowding out of the one thing necessary by the accumulation of many things urgent.
  • 4
    Soil can be changed. The parable is a diagnostic tool, not a verdict. Hard ground can be broken up by honest prayer and genuine encounter. Rocky ground can be cleared by the willingness to do the slow, unglamorous work of rooting — daily practice, consistent community, the disciplines that form structure beneath the surface. Thorny ground can be weeded by deliberately removing what is choking what matters. None of this is easy. All of it is possible.
  • 5
    Good soil produces fruit in different quantities — and all are valid. Thirtyfold, sixtyfold, a hundredfold. Not everyone produces at the same rate. Not every good-soil person produces identically. The parable does not demand a hundredfold from every believer — it describes a range. The call is not to be the most fruitful. It is to be the kind of soil where fruit is possible at all.

A Prayer Based on the Parable of the Sower

This parable calls for a prayer of honest self-examination — not to condemn, but to diagnose — and a request for the conditions of good soil to be cultivated in us.

Prayer of the Sower — For Good Soil

Lord, I want to be good soil. But if I am honest, I am not always sure I am. When I read this parable and look at my own life, I can see pieces of the hard path — places where truth bounces off before it has a chance to land because I have already decided what I think. I can see pieces of the rocky ground — moments of genuine spiritual feeling that didn’t produce lasting change because there was nothing underneath them. And I can see a great deal of thorny ground — the care of this world and the deceitfulness of the things I am accumulating, quietly choking what was growing.

I am asking You today to tend the soil. Break up what is hardened. The places that became hard through hurt, disappointment, repeated unanswered prayer, or simply the long habit of not responding to what I know is true — break those up, Lord. Not violently, but thoroughly. Let the plough go deep enough to find the good ground underneath.

Clear what is rocky. Give me the willingness to do the slow, unglamorous work of forming roots — the daily prayer that doesn’t feel significant, the scripture reading that doesn’t produce immediate illumination, the faithful practice of community and accountability that forms structure beneath the surface. Let me choose depth over the excitement of repeated beginnings.

Weed the thorns. Show me what is crowding out the one thing necessary. The screen time, the financial anxiety, the ambition, the busyness — the things that are not wrong in themselves but have become too loud and too present. Give me the courage to cut back what is choking what matters.

And make me good soil, Father. Not for my own satisfaction, but because fruit — the kind of fruit that endures, that feeds others, that multiplies — only comes from the depth and the clearance and the consistency that good soil represents. Plant Your Word in me. I want it to take root. I want to be the kind of ground where something lasting grows.

Amen.
A Short Daily Prayer — For Receptive Soil

“Lord, prepare my heart today to receive what You are planting. Break up what is hard. Clear away what is choking. Let Your Word find good ground in me — and let what grows bear fruit that lasts. Amen.”

Final Thought

The sower keeps sowing. He does not stop scattering seed because some of it falls on hard ground or gets choked by thorns. He sows generously, indiscriminately, faithfully. And somewhere in every field there is good ground — ground that was prepared, cleared, and deep enough to hold what was planted. The question this parable leaves with every reader is not “is God sowing?” He is. The question is: what kind of ground are you offering Him today? The answer can change. That is the invitation at the heart of the parable of the Sower.

Scripture References
Matthew 13:1–23 Mark 4:1–20 Luke 8:4–15 Mark 4:13 Isaiah 55:10–11 James 1:21
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the meaning of the Parable of the Sower?
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The Parable of the Sower teaches that the same truth — the Word of God — produces completely different results depending on the condition of the heart that receives it. Jesus describes four types of soil representing four types of response: the hard path (truth never penetrates), rocky ground (emotional response without deep roots), thorny ground (genuine growth choked by worldly preoccupation), and good soil (deep, fruitful, lasting response). Uniquely, Jesus Himself explains this parable in detail (Matthew 13:18–23), making it one of the clearest interpretations in all the Gospels. He also tells the disciples that understanding this parable is the key to understanding all the others (Mark 4:13).
What do the four soils represent in the Parable of the Sower?
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According to Jesus’s own explanation: (1) The hard path represents someone who hears truth but does not understand it — the enemy takes it away immediately. (2) The rocky ground represents someone who receives truth with joy but has no depth — when trouble comes, they fall away. (3) The thorny ground represents someone who receives truth but is choked by “the care of this world, and the deceitfulness of riches” — they become unfruitful. (4) The good ground represents someone who hears, understands, and bears fruit — 30, 60, or 100 times what was planted. Three soils receive the seed. Only one produces fruit. The diagnostic question for any believer is: which soil am I?
What is the moral of the Parable of the Sower?
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The moral operates on two levels. For the individual: tend the soil of your heart — break up what is hardened, clear away the rocks of shallow emotionalism, weed out the thorns of worldly preoccupation, and cultivate the depth and consistency that allow truth to take root. For those who share truth: be faithful, generous, and persistent in sowing — not discouraged by soils that don’t respond, because the sower’s job is to scatter seed faithfully, not to control where it lands or guarantee what it does. The most practically demanding part of the parable is the diagnosis it invites: am I actually bearing fruit, or am I one of the three soils that has something growing but is not producing what it was made for?
What does the seed represent in the Parable of the Sower?
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Jesus says explicitly: the seed is “the word of the kingdom” (Matthew 13:19) — the message of God’s kingdom, which includes the gospel, scripture, and any truth about God’s nature and will. In Luke’s version (8:11) Jesus says directly: “The seed is the word of God.” The seed is identical in every case — the same message, from the same sower. What varies is not the quality of the seed but the condition of the soil receiving it. This means the parable places all the responsibility for growth on the receptivity of the hearer, not on the quality of what is being planted. God sows generously and consistently. The question is what His Word lands on.
Can someone change from one soil type to another?
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Yes — and this is one of the most hopeful aspects of the parable. Soil is not fixed. Hard ground can be broken up by the willingness to receive truth with genuine openness, through prayer, honest community, and encounters with God that crack the surface. Rocky ground can be deepened through the slow formation of habits and roots — the daily practices that build structure beneath the surface rather than seeking only emotional highs. Thorny ground can be weeded through deliberate choices to prioritise what matters over what crowds it out. The parable is diagnostic, not deterministic. It describes conditions, not permanent identities. The invitation at the end of the parable — “who hath ears to hear, let him hear” — implies that the hearing itself can change.
Why is the Parable of the Sower the key to all parables?
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In Mark 4:13, Jesus says to the disciples: “Know ye not this parable? and how then will ye know all parables?” The reason is that the Parable of the Sower is a meta-parable — it describes the very process by which all parables (and all truth) are received. It explains why some people hear Jesus’s teaching and are transformed while others hear identical words and are unmoved. Without understanding the four soils, a listener might wonder why the Prodigal Son’s story moves some people to tears and repentance while leaving others completely cold. The answer is in the soil. The Sower parable provides the interpretive key: the issue is never the seed or the sower. It is always the ground.