The Rev. Canon Melanie Dickson Lemburg
The 7th Sunday after Pentecost-Proper 10A 2026
St. Andrew’s and San Andreas, Rogers
July 12, 2026
Good morning/good afternoon! My name is Melanie Lemburg; I serve on the bishop’s staff as the Canon to the Ordinary, and I’m delighted to be making my first visit here with you today!
A little over 7 years ago, my parents bought a farm in Northeast Mississippi. My mom was a teacher and my dad works in politics, and they bought the farm as a bridge into retirement and so that they could feed themselves from the fruits and vegetables of their own harvest. My parents bought land with two houses and a barn, moved out there with my brother, his wife, and their two infant twin daughters, and they all learned how to farm by watching YouTube videos.
It has been a grand and meaningful endeavor, and it has taught me so much about life and hope and the earth and sustainability and especially about all the things we cannot change or control, like the vicissitudes (unpredictability) of weather.
Last weekend, I was at the farm to spend time with my family for the 4th of July holiday, and my mom and I have a habit of walking the land in the evening after supper. We wandered around the fruit trees to see what fruits are growing (persimmons, and blueberries, and apples!), and then we wandered into the area of the farm where they grow things in the raised beds—these wooden boxes that they’ve added good soil to, and then we wandered down into the fields to see what is planted there, lined up in neat rows.
As we walked, my mom was telling me proudly about her corn that she had planted in one of the raised beds, and how she had been keeping an eye on my brother’s corn that he had planted in the field. She was delighted to report that her corn was thriving and already had some ears on it way before my brother’s corn was showing signs of producing. As we grew closer, my mother exclaimed in dismay as we discovered that the storm that had blown through the night before had blown all her corn over in the raised bed, so it was lying in a big pile. When we investigated further, we discovered that the tiny persistent roots were still holding, exposed out of the soil, but working hard to do their job of keeping the corn anchored in the ground.
After her initial dismay and investigation, my mom turned to look at my brother’s corn patch, and we discovered that it was still standing upright possibly because it was completely surrounded by weeds that were helping hold it up. We also determined that the roots of his corn were able to go down further into the ground (as opposed to my mom’s corn in the raised bed) to provide more support to keep his corn upright.
All week long, this parable of our family farm life has been in conversation for me with the parable in today’s gospel reading. As another writer puts it, “The word ‘parable’ means to ‘overturn’ or ‘cast aside’. The parables are stories told by Jesus and intended to upset what we think!”[i] And our reading for today is the first parable in a series of 8 parables that Matthew’s gospel gives us about how the Kingdom of God has already broken into this life, and how this inbreaking can invite us into new possibilities in unexpected ways.
So how might Jesus’s parable about the sower invite us to overturn or cast aside things that might need to be overturned or cast aside? Where might it be inviting us to see the Kingdom of God breaking into our world and our lives and this congregation and even your relationship with the other congregation here in unexpected ways and places?
“Listen! A sower went out to sow” Jesus begins. And then he tells the story of a really bad farmer. This farmer throws seed around wildly, with seemingly no thought or care for optimizing soil and growth conditions. (Now my family may have learned to farm from YouTube, but even we know, that’s not how you do it!). Jesus’s parable goes on to detail the plight of the seeds that have been sown in different (mostly unfortunate) locations—along the path, among the thorns, upon the rocks, and then finally, some on the good soil. Jesus concludes the parable by saying that the seeds that fell on the good soil brought forth grain—“some a hundredfold, some sixty, some thirty…”
Now, this might not mean much to our modern ears, but another writer sees this as being so significant that we might consider renaming the parable “the hundredfold harvest.”[ii] Because in a normal farming year, a seven-fold harvest would be a really, really good year for that farmer. A tenfold harvest would mean true abundance. Thirty-fold would feed a village for a year, and a hundred fold?… Well that would be absolutely unheard of. It’s crazy. Ridiculous. Miraculous.
So where is the good news in this parable for us?
It has been interesting to me to think about this homily that I’m preaching to two different congregations today: St. Andrew’s and San Andreas, and it seems that your two congregations have things in common with my family’s two corn patches. You are planted very near to each other, trying to grow the same crop and facing similar and different challenges.
For the people of St. Andrew’s: I’m wondering if y’all might be feeling a bit like my mom’s corn crop? You’ve had a bit of a storm blow through here in the expected departure of your long-time, beloved priest Father Craig, and you’ve had a bit more of a dust-up with a public fight via text message between your former senior warden and your former musician a couple of weeks ago which was concluded by the resignation of each from their position. Maybe you are feeling like you’re tipped over, piled up a bit on top of each other trying to catch your breath?
For the people of San Andreas: I’m wondering if y’all might feel a bit like my brothers’ corn crop? You’ve had a bit of a storm blow through here with the departure of St. Andrew’s long-time priest, and not knowing what will come next for them, and therefore, for y’all and that relationship. And I wonder if the current political situation might have you feeling like you are a flourishing corn crop that is surrounded by weeds that threaten to choke you and hold you captive and stifle your growth as individuals and as a congregation?
The good news for all of us is that we are all seed in the hands of a sower who casts with abandon and whose power inspires harvests so far beyond anything we can ask for or imagine. There are certainly things that we can do to assist and support in God’s good work that is already begun and ongoing—in our lives, in our church, in our world; but none of it is really up to us. God will always find a way—with or without us. Our task is to nurture and tend what God has entrusted to us; our task is try to be faithful: to God and to each other.
And one of cool things that I learned about corn is that corn has to brush up against other corn plants in order to get pollinated. It is how it is created. We need each other to flourish, to bear fruit. How might this speak to you as individuals in your different congregation and how might this be speaking to all of you in the two different congregations?
I reached out to my mom earlier this weekend to get an update on the two corn plots on the farm. And there’s good news: her corn “is still living—bowed but not broken” and trying to stand up a bit straighter once again, now that the storm has come and gone. Its ears are still growing and preparing to be harvested. She reports that my brother’s corn plants are still surrounded by weeds, but there is corn growing on his plants, and the brown at the top of the ears shows it, too, is almost ready to be harvested.
Your invitation this week is to think about, pray about how is Jesus’s parable about the sower inviting you to overturn or cast aside things that might need to be overturned or cast aside in your life or in the life of this congregation? Where might it be inviting you to see the Kingdom of God breaking into our world and our lives and this congregation and even your relationship with the other congregation here in unexpected ways and places?

