Reflecting on the years spent in Stalin’s labour camps, Alexander Solzhenitsyn wrote:
“I learnt one great lesson from my years in the prison camps. I learnt how a person becomes evil and how he becomes good.
“Gradually, I came to realise that the line that separates good from evil passes not between states, or between classes, or between political parties, but right through every human heart. Even in hearts that are overwhelmed by evil, one small bridgehead of good is retained. And in the best of all hearts, there remains an unuprooted small corner of evil.” (Gulag Archipelago)
A bridgehead of good, and a small corner of evil.

Many of today’s translations of the Bible ‘distort’ the text to make it easier to read. An example of this is in today’s Gospel (Matt. 13:14–30).
Most translations head this parable ‘Weeds among the Wheat’. That is very polite.
Earlier translations use the word ‘darnel’ rather than weeds.
Darnel is a ‘mimic weed’, neither entirely tame nor quite wild, that looks and behaves so much like wheat that it can’t survive without human help.
Its seeds are stowaways: the plant’s survival strategy requires its seeds to be harvested along with those of domesticated grasses, then stored and replanted the following season.
Darnel occupies a grey area in human agricultural history. It’s definitely not good for us.
When people eat its seeds, they become dizzy, off-balance and nauseous. Its scientific name, L. temulentum, comes from the Latin temulentus, meaning drunken, intoxicated or tipsy.
Bearded darnel grass is pernicious and poisonous to both other plants and humans. It’s also difficult to distinguish from wheat, which was a vital food crop for the Galileans.
Notice the activity of both the farmer and his enemy. The farmer sows the good seed; the enemy doesn’t try to dig it up.
The enemy doesn’t try to burn the field. He doesn’t poison the wheat or steal it.
Instead, the enemy plants darnel — what today is known as ‘false wheat’.
This false wheat looks just like real wheat until it bears seed. By then, though, its roots have surrounded the wheat’s roots and begun sucking up all its nutrients.
Because the roots are so intertwined, pulling out the weed would uproot the wheat as well.
Even though the farmer’s servants want to go and get rid of the weeds, the farmer wisely tells them no. At this point, the two plants can’t be told apart, and even if they could, pulling one up would pull the other with it.
Instead, the farmer suggests they let both grow together until harvest. Then, at harvest time, the weeds can be collected and burned before the wheat is gathered into the barn.
The same soil that nourishes the wheat equally nourishes the weed.
Maybe the story invites me to be courageous — courageous enough to allow the weeds and the wheat to grow together.



