Cooperating Over The Long Haul
Hebrews 6:7
"For ground that drinks the rain which often falls on it and produces vegetation useful to those for whose sake it is also tilled, receives a blessing from God; but if it yields thorns and thistles, it is worthless and close to being cursed, and it ends up being burned."
Paul now dives into something that is difficult to understand and difficult to deal with once we've got it.
Productive ground verses unproductive ground.
Productive ground → drinks in the rain and brings forth useful vegetation for those who cultivate it. This land is blessed by God.
Unproductive ground → drinks in the exact same rain but only produces thorns and thistles. It is worthless (literally "disqualified" or "rejected" ), near to being cursed, and its end is to be burned.
This isn’t about two different kinds of rain or two different farmers. It’s the same blessings, the same opportunities, producing radically different results depending on the heart/soil of the person. It really has a lot to do with how one's intention plays into this.
The heart and intention are at the very center of this metaphor. The rain falls equally on both plots of ground. The sun shines the same. The farmer’s labor is the same. What differs is how the soil responds to what it receives. One soil cooperates with the rain and produces useful fruit. The other resists, and the very same moisture only feeds thorns and thistles.
And so, in this we can see how two Christians can each have access to the same Word of God and interpret completely contrary beliefs from them. On one the seed falls on good soil, on the another there are weeds and thorns present that choke the word, limiting its ability to bear fruit. It’s not primarily an intellectual issue. It’s a heart issue; the presence or absence of thorns and thistles. Good soil receives the Word with humility, faith, and a willingness to be changed. It cooperates. Thorny soil has competing desires already growing: pride, self-justification, love of sin, worldly cares, bitterness, or a desire to twist Scripture to fit one’s preferences. The Word is received on the surface, but the thorns choke it. The person may still sound spiritual or even use correct terminology, but the life produces little or no lasting fruit.
And so this is still a little confusing because we know that Jesus promises that if anyone comes to Him he will not withhold His blessing.
John 6:37
"All that the Father gives Me will come to Me, and the one who comes to Me I will certainly not cast out."
God does not turn away anyone who genuinely comes to Christ. His arms are open. His blessing of salvation, forgiveness, and adoption is freely given to all who come in faith. That is rock-solid.
So how does this fit with Hebrews 6:7-8?
I suppose the key to understanding this is to understand what kind of "blessing" Hebrews 6:7 is talking about, and the difference between coming and continuing in the right soil.
Hebrews 6 zooms in on what happens after that initial exposure to the gospel. It goes on to encourage diligence; being imitators of those who through faith and endurance inherit the promises.
The rain keeps falling.
The question then becomes; will we cooperate with it through continued faith and endurance, or will we let the soil grow lazy and thorny?
This is why the call to diligence is so important. Diligence is the active cultivation of the heart (self-examination) pulling weeds, breaking up hard ground, and choosing to keep receiving the rain with an open, obedient intention.
Regularly asking..."What is growing in me right now?"
"Is it faith, love, and holiness; or are bitterness, selfishness, anxiety, or compromise beginning to take root?"
When the Holy Spirit highlights a thorn (a habitual sin, an idol, a grudge, a worldly attachment), diligence says, "Lord, help me uproot this." It doesn’t negotiate with the weed; it removes it before the roots go deeper.
The beautiful thing is that God Himself helps us with this diligence.
God sends the rain, but He also gives us the desire and the power to respond in wisdom (Philippians 2:12-13).
Our job is to cooperate; to keep showing up, keep saying "yes," and keep imitating those who through faith and patience inherit the promises.
The call to diligence only makes sense if we’re willing to examine why the heart resists or disobeys the rain of God’s Word. The author of Hebrews has already diagnosed the core issue earlier in the letter.
Unbelief.
But unbelief rarely shows up as outright atheism. It usually wears more subtle disguises in the daily life of someone who has tasted spiritual blessings.
Deep down they don’t truly believe God exists.
If the heart secretly doubts God’s reality, then His Word becomes just another opinion or religious idea rather than authoritative truth. And so, from that attitude it's an easy flip to assume one needs something more tangible to support their spirituality. His Word loses its weight. It becomes one voice among many opinions. The rain falls, but the soil doesn’t recognize it as living water from a living God. This is the soil producing thorns instead of fruit.
Take a look back to where we were:
Hebrews 3:12
"Take care, brothers and sisters, that there not be in any one of you an evil, unbelieving heart that falls away from the living God."
Notice the phrase..."the living God."
Not the theoretical God. Not the distant God. The living God; present, active, speaking, judging, rewarding, and very near. In fact living within the soul.
When that reality fades in the heart, people often reach for tangible substitutes. Everything from religious routines, to emotional experiences or signs, or even ministry activity. From rituals that feel more concrete, to institutional traditions, rules, human wisdom, psychology, and self-help.
All of these can look spiritual on the surface, but they grow as thorns because they spring from a heart that isn’t fully convinced God Himself is enough.
Why isn't Jesus enough?
There's a myriad of reasons why someone might struggle with this.
Unbelief in His nearness (lack of faith) is a major one. Another is a desire for control (illusions we can manage). And many fear vulnerability (substitutes often feel safer). We saw this is the rich young ruler.
And finally the big one:
The idolatry of the senses (preferring what we can see and measure).
The Good News:
The entire book of Hebrews is written to shout Jesus is better.
Better than the angels.
Better than Moses.
Better than the old priesthood.
Better than the temple.
And better than any ritual or tradition.
He is the living God who has come near. Very near. In fact no separation except what we've constructed.
He is enough for salvation, enough for sanctification, enough for daily life, and enough for eternity.
When we truly believe this, that He is the living God dwelling in us, then the soil opens up to the rain. Then we no longer need the thorns of substitutes. And we become useful to Him and to others.
Amen 🙏🏼