April 27, 2026

The Barren Fig Tree…Matthew 21:18-22

Now in the early morning, when He was returning to the city, He became hungry. And seeing a lone fig tree by the road, He came to it and found nothing on it except leaves alone; and He said to it, “No longer shall there ever be any fruit from you.” And at once the fig tree withered.

Seeing this, the disciples were amazed and asked, “How did the fig tree wither all at once?” And Jesus answered and said to them, “Truly I say to you, if you have faith and do not doubt, you will not only do what was done to the fig tree, but even if you say to this mountain, ‘Be taken up and cast into the sea,’ it will happen. And whatever you ask in prayer, believing, you will receive it all.

Context: This event occurs on the final week before Jesus’ crucifixion, during his entry into Jerusalem and the events around the temple cleansing. He comes from Bethany, sees a fig tree with leaves but no fruit, curses it, and that act is placed right next to his public judgment on the temple, so the tree becomes a sign of Israel’s spiritual barrenness and coming judgment.

We see the same event recorded in the eleventh chapter of the Gospel of Mark.

In Mark, the fig tree story is “sandwiched” around the temple cleansing: Jesus curses the tree, goes into Jerusalem and cleanses the temple, then the disciples later see the tree withered. Matthew compresses the same material so the withering appears immediate, which makes the sign feel more direct and dramatic.

The big idea is not that Jesus is angry at a plant; it is an enacted parable about outward religion without fruit. The leafy tree looks promising, but it produces nothing, just as the temple system looked active while lacking true righteousness.

The two main biblical accounts are in Mark 11:12–14, 20–25 and Matthew 21:18–22. Both tell the same basic event: Jesus sees a fig tree with leaves but no fruit, curses it, and the tree withers as a sign of judgment and fruitlessness.The differences do not change the main message: the fig tree is an acted-out warning about outward appearance without real fruit. Mark emphasizes the lesson through the disciples’ delayed observation and Jesus’ teaching, while Matthew emphasizes the immediacy and force of Jesus’ judgment. 

Do these two accounts reflect errors in the text? 

No…but this offers the opportunity for a brief explanation of scriptural inspiration. Two terms are applicable…

Verbal Plenary -Verbal plenary inspiration means that all of Scripture is God-breathed and that God inspired the actual words, not just the general ideas.

Verbal means the inspiration extends to the words themselves, not only the concepts.

Plenary means full or complete, so every part of Scripture is equally inspired and authoritative.

Inerrancy - Inerrancy is the belief that Scripture, in its original form, is without error and fully truthful in everything it affirms. It does not mean every sentence in the Bible is true as a standalone quote; it means the Bible faithfully reports truth, even when it records differing perspectives.

Scripture makes this claim most directly in passages like 2 Timothy 3:16–17 and 2 Peter 1:20–21. Paul says “all Scripture is God-breathed,” and Peter says prophecy did not come by human will but through men “carried along by the Holy Spirit”. This doctrine is often used to support the idea that Scripture is trustworthy in all it teaches, while still allowing for different authors to use different styles, emphases, and arrangements

Inerrancy and verbal plenary inspiration do not require every Gospel to give the same event in the same order or with the same level of detail. They require that each writer tell the truth, under God’s inspiration, according to his own purpose, style, and arrangement.

  • Mark presents the fig tree in a more chronological way, with the temple cleansing placed in the middle of the episode. 
  • Matthew compresses the material and emphasizes the immediate force of Jesus’ action. That means the differences can be read as complementary perspective, not as a contradiction.

Differences are not, by definition, contradictions; Skeptics want to assert contradiction because it gives them a reason to reject Christ. Inerrancy is about truthfulness in what Scripture intends to affirm, not about modern transcript-style uniformity. So if one Gospel summarizes, another expands, and one arranges events topically while another arranges them chronologically, both can still be fully true.

Best summary - The cleanest reconciliation is this: Mark and Matthew report the same event faithfully, but with different narrative emphasis and arrangement. That difference does not weaken inerrancy; it illustrates how inspired Scripture can be both fully divine and genuinely human.


Explanation: So, what does the parable of the Fig Tree mean? Jesus cursing the fig tree is a symbolic act, not just a reaction to hunger. In the Gospel accounts, the tree’s outward appearance suggested fruitfulness, but it had no fruit, and Jesus uses that to picture empty religion and coming judgment on spiritual barrenness.

The fig tree commonly represents Israel in the biblical imagination, so many Christian interpreters see this as a sign against a nation and religious leaders that had the appearance of faith but lacked real obedience and justice. It is closely linked to Jesus cleansing the temple, which strengthens the idea that he was condemning outward worship without genuine fruit. 

In plain terms, the fig tree is a living parable: looking alive is not the same as bearing fruit, and visible religion is not the same as true faithfulness. 


Illustration: On a hillside in Italy, there was a vineyard known by the villagers as the most productive in the region. It was not famous because it looked grand from the road, but because every season it seemed to overflow with grapes. While other vineyards struggled with uneven rows or weak vines, this one was carefully tended: the soil was rich, the branches were pruned at the right time, and the workers knew exactly when to water, trim, and harvest.

In spring, the vines woke quietly. By summer, the rows were thick with leaves, and by late season the grapes hung in heavy clusters, purple and gold in the sunlight. Travelers would stop and stare, wondering how one vineyard could yield so much. The owner would simply smile and say, “A vine gives fruit when it is healthy and well kept. Productivity is not magic; it is life cared for faithfully.

The vineyard became a lesson to the whole valley. Farmers from nearby hills came to learn its methods, but the owner always pointed them back to the same truth: good fruit comes from patient cultivation, wise pruning, and roots planted in good ground. And so the most productive vineyard in Italy was remembered not just for its harvest, but for what it taught—fruit is the visible sign of hidden health.


Application: Broadly speaking, some degree of spiritual fruit will naturally be evident in the life of a Christian because the Holy Spirit is at work within them. The fruit may not show immediate perfection; it is the gradual showing of a changed heart. Scripture presents spiritual fruit as something that will naturally become visible in a believer’s life over time. Jesus says that abiding in him leads to much fruit, and Paul describes the Spirit’s fruit as qualities like love, joy, peace, patience, and self-control.

So, is it reasonable to assume the natural course in a believer’s life is fruitfulness? Yes…

Why then, do many of us fail to demonstrate real robust an visible fruit? The illustration of the vineyard is instructive. Environment (soil, water), and discipline (pruning) are critical to maximizing our fruitfulness for God’s glory. We can refer to Davids first Psalm for guidance;

Blessed is the person who does not walk in the counsel of the wicked, Nor stand in the path of sinners, Nor sit in the seat of scoffers!

But his delight is in the Law of the LORD, And on His Law he meditates day and night.

He will be like a tree planted by streams of water, Which yields its fruit in its season, And its leaf does not wither; And in whatever he does, he prospers.

The German commentators, Keil & Delitzsch tell us what it means to be “blessed.” The Hebrew word אַ֥שְֽׁרֵי  specifically connotes the idea of being “on the right path.” And that “pathleads to fruitfulness (as we see in verse three). We like to read “happy is the man...” but we do disservice to the text. Psalm One is a simple but precise manual on fruitfulness

  • First, create an environment that encourages fruitfulness
    • Don’t take advise from people who don’t affirm God’s authority in their lives
    • Don’t hang around with people whose lifestyle don’t reflect fruitfulness
    • Don’t adopt an attitude of cynicism about my journey toward fruitfulness
  • Second, prune my life with discipline
    • Be thrilled excited and captivated with God’s Word
    • Make God’s Word operative in my life by saturating myself in it. 


In one sentence…A true believer will naturally be fruitful but, a God-centered life becomes like a well-watered tree: rooted, resilient, and fruit-bearing because it is fed by the life-giving word of God.


Prayer: Father, I come before You with a humble heart, asking You to make my life fruitful for Your glory.

Root me deeply in Your Word, and let my thoughts, desires, words, and actions be shaped by Your truth. Remove from me whatever is dead, unhelpful, or displeasing to You, and prune me with Your loving hand so that I may bear lasting fruit.

Lord Jesus, I abide in You and confess that apart from You I can do nothing. Fill me with Your Spirit, strengthen my faith, and teach me to walk in obedience, love, patience, kindness, and self-control.

Let my life not be like a tree with leaves only, but a tree that produces real fruit in season. Use me to bless others, to honor Your name, and to display the beauty of Your kingdom in all I do.

I surrender myself to You today. Make me faithful, fruitful, and steady,  for the glory of Your name. Amen.


In the next several entries we will learn more about how God means by being fruitful. Stay tuned…meanwhile,  Live boldly out there today…





 

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