Pastoring People to Jesus

Pastoring People to Jesus

Jesus’ parable of the sower reveals that the power of the gospel is never in question, because the seed is always good and the word of the kingdom never changes. The difference in outcomes is found in the condition of the heart that receives it, not in the quality of the message itself. Some hearts resist immediately, some respond briefly and drift away, some are choked by competing concerns, and others receive the word and bear fruit. This parable describes the reality of human response without excusing disengagement or surrendering responsibility.

The resurrected Jesus clarifies the mission of the Church by commanding His followers to make disciples of all nations, not to search for perfect soil or withdraw when the response is slow. Disciple-making assumes patience, process, and partnership with the Holy Spirit, because Jesus sends His people knowing that not all will respond the same way. The call is not to force results but to remain faithful to the work of sowing and shepherding.

People generally fall into three spiritual postures toward the gospel: resistant, indifferent, and open. Resistant people are not lacking information but are often shaped by disappointment, mistrust, or false images of God, and Scripture teaches that they are met with mercy rather than pressure. Paul testified, “I was shown mercy because I acted ignorantly in unbelief,” revealing that patience is not weakness but a strategy of grace. Indifferent people are often religious without being committed, and they need time, clarity, and consistent witness until Jesus becomes central rather than peripheral. Open people are those whose hearts have already been prepared by the Spirit, and in those moments clarity and invitation are required, because “hesitation is not humility; it is disobedience.”

The conditions of the heart are never permanent, because God is able to change what human effort cannot. God promises, “I will remove the heart of stone from your flesh and give you a heart of flesh,” demonstrating that transformation belongs to Him. Faithful presence, Spirit-led discernment, and trust in God’s patience allow believers to walk with others toward their next step, confident that the same grace that changed them is still at work today.

As you reflect on this message this week, consider the following:

  1. People respond to the gospel from different places of the heart, whether resistant, indifferent, or open. Think about the people God has placed in your daily life and consider where they may be right now. How might the Holy Spirit be inviting you to respond differently, not by forcing an outcome but by helping them take a next step toward Jesus?
  2. The call to make disciples does not remove the reality of rejection, delay, or slow growth. Reflect on any pressure you feel to produce immediate results in others’ spiritual lives. How would your posture change if you trusted God with the harvest and focused instead on faithful presence, patience, and obedience?
  3. God is able to change hearts that appear hardened, distracted, or uninterested. Consider areas where you may have quietly written someone off or assumed they will never change. What would it look like to reengage with hope, believing that God is still at work and not finished yet?