Silicon Gods and Mustard Seeds: Missing the Reckoning in a Tech-Blind Age
Luke 12:56
"You hypocrites! You know how to interpret the appearance of earth and sky, but why do you not know how to interpret the present time?"
Why is it that some can't see the writing on the wall? I suppose the easy answer is, change is messy, and seeing the truth can demand action they’re not ready for. I think one take away today from this scripture is just that, about being ready.
They’d rather stick to predicting the rain than confronting a call to reckoning. There is a spiritual blindness in our modern age as well, and it mirrors the ignorance around Christ’s first coming. It’s like many have swapped the Pharisees’ legalism for our own idols; information, screens, stats, and the endless noise of the influencers, Techno-priests. We’re obsessed with forecasting markets or trends but oblivious to the signs of a deeper reckoning. Addicted to virtual realities while ignoring the deeper truth. It’s a straight line from the Pharisees rulebooks to our techno algorithms, both choking out the ability to see what’s really coming.
Jesus was a master at reading His audience, I wonder what he might comment about in our age. What would He say to our tech-saturated age, where we’re less tethered to soil and more to silicon? Maybe He’d talk about the "seed" of a viral post. He might point to the "yeast" and "bread" of data we bake daily, bloated with noise but starved of substance. That's the complexity of mankind. Able to take a simple thing and make it extremely difficult and ironically worthless for all our efforts.
He’d meet us right in that tension, turning our digital obsessions into mirrors we can’t look away from.
He might say,
"The Kingdom is like a seed posted online; some fall on shallow screens and wither in the likes, others root deep but are swiped past by distracted eyes."
It’s that fleeting hype we chase, mistaking it for meaning. He'd flip the tables on our modern ideas about the message of the gospel and its potential. Like the mustard seed parable that imagines an herb somehow growing into a large tree. And somehow people read that parable and miss that the fowls of the air come and nest in its branches. Fowl that typically signifies the wicked and do nothings. How could such a thing happen, a tiny mustard seed become a huge tree filled with do nothings? It's unnatural. Until it does, and you realize that it's really about a false message growing into a doctrine and ultimately a movement that becomes the basis for all spirituality in our age. Not a mustard seed at all but a large tree that carries all sorts of beliefs about whatever ideology suits the people, and especially the influential people. It expands until it encompasses the whole world and accommodates a wide variety of ideas and beliefs. Just as the leaven does to the whole loaf. It becomes the world, influenced by the world, for the world' own ends. Many groups believe this is the intent for the creation of the Church, to establish the kingdom come via man's government. The Mormon's come to mind.
2 Timothy 3:13
"But evil men and seducers shall wax worse and worse, deceiving, and being deceived."
The mustard seed’s been hijacked, and now it’s a sprawling mess of deception—growing wilder, twisted, with roots in self-delusion. And this has been the entire history of "The Church". It began in many little ways, a flurry of first and second century traditions vied for influence over the faith, but most prominent is the influence of toleration by Constantine in the third century. Constantine’s toleration—313 AD, the Edict of Milan—looks like a win on paper: Christianity goes from persecuted to permitted, even preferred. The mustard seed gets a greenhouse. The Church is gaining power and influence, on its way to this dream of the kingdom of God being established on earth by men. It’s a hinge moment in the formation of what would eventually become the modern Catholic Church, where the seed starts sprouting something else. Power creeps in. The Church gets cozy with the government. And that's when it got off the rails. I truly believe ONLY Jesus Christ can be trusted with establishing the government. I suppose that was true also for the early church fathers, which is why they felt the need to establish a "Vicar of Christ", thinking they could do better than the Holy Spirit in preserving the faith.
The Church goes from a movement to an institution, and the tracks switch from Christ’s Kingdom to something human-made. The early Church fathers, post-Constantine, must’ve felt the vacuum. Persecution fades, the Empire’s in bed with them, and suddenly there’s no clear shepherd, just a bunch of sheep with fancy hats.
Enter the "Vicar of Christ"—the Pope as stand-in, a human placeholder for divine rule. It’s a logical fix if you’re trying to keep the train rolling, but it’s also where the rails buckle. They trade the unpredictability of Christ’s direct reign for a system they can control, a tree they can prune. Power doesn’t just creep in; it takes root, and the gospel’s wild simplicity gets tamed into titles and tiaras. Kings and Queens become the strong hand of the once meek who were inheriting the earth. It’s a total inversion; fame, influence, and power flip the script, and the wild simplicity of Jesus gets crowned with earthly thrones instead of thorns.
This tracks with that Constantine pivot of the Churches mission. Once the Church hitches its wagon to Empire, it’s not long before the meek inheriting the earth becomes a fairy tale for stained-glass windows. The Vicar of Christ blesses the mighty, and the gospel’s call to weakness, to surrender, gets buried under royal decrees and the court. It’s like the mustard seeds tree’s branches start reaching up for crowns instead of out for the broken.
Today, we see echoes of this trending among the techno-priests who wield info-influence like scepters, pruning truth to fit their platforms. Influence, stats, screens, they’re the new scepters of the royalty, pruning truth to fit their narratives about tolerance of a new-age pagan culture, not unlike how the Church once bent to the Empire. Chasing virtual crowns while the real Kingdom slips past unnoticed.
But is Jesus really in danger of being missed again while the world plays around with its silicon gods?
In Luke 17:24, He makes it plain:
"For as the lightning flashes and lights up the sky from one side to the other, so will the Son of Man be in his day."
Not missing that. It’s not a quiet whisper or a hidden seed this time, it’s a global, undeniable flash.
Revelation 1:7 seals it:
"Every eye will see him, even those who pierced him."
It’s not a question of whether we’ll notice. He’s not sneaking in the back door. No one’s scrolling past that, silicon gods or not. The second coming’s loud, but the buildup’s where we risk missing Him. Again. The distraction of our tech-saturated age could blind many if not most to the signs leading up to his arrival. Jesus does warn that many will be caught off guard or unprepared for it.
In Matthew 24:37-39, He compares it to Noah’s day:
"For as in those days before the flood they were eating and drinking, marrying and giving in marriage, until the day when Noah entered the ark, and they were unaware until the flood came and swept them all away, so will be the coming of the Son of Man."
People didn’t miss the flood itself; they missed what it meant until it was already too late. Folks were just living their lives, oblivious to the reckoning until it hit. It’s not about missing the event, it’s about missing the readiness, being so wrapped up in the everyday grind (or today, our silicon gods) that the suddenness of it blindsides them.
Matthew 25:13
"Watch therefore, for you know neither the day nor the hour."
And I think this is where Jesus was heading when he commented back in Luke 12:56:
"You hypocrites! You know how to interpret the appearance of earth and sky, but why do you not know how to interpret the present time?"
He’s saying the second coming’s unmistakable, but plenty will still "miss" it, not by not seeing, but by not being ready when the sky lights up with Jesus and his bride.
The hypocrites He’s roasting aren’t dumb, it's not that they haven't been studying and investing centuries of thought into this stuff, they’re just fixated on the wrong forecast. Today, we’re not that different, decoding market trends or viral patterns but ignoring the spiritual barometer. Like those in Noah's time, people are comfortably staying at home relaxing, enjoying a snack on a rainy day after day after day. Doom scrolling through the pages of their agendas and ignoring the flood. Just a bunch of the fowl of the air.
Maybe everyone will know about his return via this new technology.
I think if Jesus did post a message on X or send everyone a text upon his return, maybe he'd say,
"You refresh feeds for crumbs of hype but miss the Bread of Life. Scroll less, seek more—My time nears."
But he's not giving a new warning before he returns this time. You've been given his Word. Now it's not about warnings and prophets. It's about being ready. Faithfulness. Abiding in his Word.