Worthy Brief - May 29, 2026

 Worthy Brief - May 29, 2026

Do not despise the day of small things!

Mark 4:30-32 And he said, “With what can we compare the kingdom of God, or what parable shall we use for it?  31 It is like a grain of mustard seed, which, when sown on the ground, is the smallest of all the seeds on earth,  32 yet when it is sown it grows up and becomes larger than all the garden plants and puts out large branches, so that the birds of the air can make nests in its shade.”

Yeshua (Jesus) asked a question: "To what shall we compare the kingdom of God?" (Mark 4:30). They may have expected Him to speak of armies, thrones, and the kind of power that makes empires tremble. They were waiting for the Kingdom to arrive the way earthly kingdoms always arrive — loud, visible, and impossible to ignore. But Yeshua reached for something small. A mustard seed. So small it could be overlooked in the palm of a hand. So ordinary that most people would never stop to notice it.  And with that simple image, Yeshua revealed that the Kingdom often begins in hidden places before it becomes visible to the world.

This should correct the way we measure the work of God. The Kingdom does not always begin with something impressive. It often begins hidden, quiet, buried, easy to dismiss — a word planted in the heart, a prayer no one heard, a child raised in faith, a small act of obedience, a calling that still looks too fragile to name out loud.

But the issue is not the seed's size -- for within it contained life. Yeshua said that when the mustard seed is sown, it grows and becomes greater than all the garden plants, putting out large branches so that the birds of the air may nest in its shade (Mark 4:32). In the Greek, the word for "grows" carries the idea of rising up. The seed does not remain buried forever. What God plants may begin hidden, but it does not stay hidden. It rises because the life within it comes from Him.

This is the pattern of the Kingdom. It began in a borrowed manger, in a carpenter's home in Nazareth, among fishermen, tax collectors, and ordinary people who had no earthly power. It moved through dusty roads, village synagogues, through healed lepers, and finally through the shame of a Roman cross. To the world, it looked small. To heaven, it was unstoppable. The prophets had spoken this way long before Yeshua told the parable.

Kingdoms and empires were often pictured as great trees — Ezekiel described Assyria like a mighty cedar whose branches gave shade to the nations (Ezekiel 31:3–6), and Daniel saw Nebuchadnezzar as a great tree visible to the ends of the earth (Daniel 4:10–12). Those kingdoms wanted to look large from the beginning. But Yeshua reveals a Kingdom that does not begin as a towering cedar. It begins as a seed — not because it is weak, but because it carries a different kind of power. The kingdoms of men grow by force, fear, and control. The Kingdom of God grows by life.

Zechariah asked, "For who has despised the day of small things?" (Zechariah 4:10). That question still searches us. Many despise the early obedience because it does not yet look fruitful. Many despise the hidden preparation because no one is applauding. Many despise the quiet beginning because they have mistaken visibility for value. But God is not confused by small beginnings. He knows what He planted.

The Hebrew prophets spoke of the coming King as the Tzemach (צֶמַח) — the Branch, the sprout that would rise from David's line. Jeremiah declared that God would raise to David a Branch of righteousness (Jeremiah 23:5). Zechariah spoke of God's Servant, the Branch (Zechariah 3:8), and again of the Man whose name is the Branch, who would build the temple of the Lord (Zechariah 6:12). Even Isaiah saw life coming from what looked like a stump — a Rod from the stem of Jesse, a Branch growing out of his roots (Isaiah 11:1). That is Yeshua. A shoot from Jesse's stump. A hidden life rising from covenant roots. What looked small to men was the beginning of the restoration of all things.

So do not despise what God has planted in you, even if it still looks small. The mustard seed does not grow merely for itself — it becomes large enough for the birds of the air to nest in its branches. Your obedience may become shade for someone weary. Your faithfulness may become a shelter for someone broken. Your small beginning may become a place where others encounter the love, mercy, and intimacy of the King. This is how the Kingdom works. It starts small. It grows quietly. It rises steadily. And one day, what everyone overlooked becomes a place of life.

Do not despise the day of small things, because the Kingdom of God has always carried life inside what others overlook. The seed may be hidden, but it is not empty. The beginning may be quiet, but it is not powerless. Yeshua knows what He has planted in you, and He is faithful to give it growth in its appointed time. So guard the seed. Water it with obedience. Refuse to measure it by applause, size, or visibility. The same King who rose from the stump of Jesse, who conquered death from the shame of a cross, and who turned a handful of disciples into witnesses to the nations, is still causing hidden things to rise. What He has planted in you will not remain buried forever. It will grow, it will bear witness, and in His time, what once seemed small will become a living testimony of His Kingdom.

Your family in the Lord with much agape love,

George (Maryland) & Baht Rivka (Arad, Israel)

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