How can I know if my heart is good soil?

TL;DR

The term "good soil" refers to a parable Jesus taught. A heart that is good soil is receptive to teaching and growing in Christ.

WHAT DOES THE BIBLE SAY?

The phrase “good soil” comes from Jesus’ parable of the sower in the Gospels, where He describes different heart responses to God’s Word (Matthew 13; Mark 4; Luke 8). A heart that is good soil is one that receives God’s Word with humility, understands it, and allows it to take root and produce lasting spiritual fruit. This kind of heart is not proud or hardened but eager to learn, like the Bereans who carefully received and tested teaching from Scripture (Acts 17:11). The Old Testament reinforces this posture through prayers for a teachable and pure heart and a deep desire to be instructed by God (Psalm 119; Psalm 51:10–12; 1 Samuel 3:10). Both Testaments also warn that sin, distraction, and hardness of heart can keep God’s Word from taking root, making it essential to guard what influences shape us (Proverbs 4:23; James 1:21). A heart of good soil is marked by humility, obedience, and a growing hunger for God’s truth, which leads to a transformed life that reflects Him. The evidence of good soil is not perfection but ongoing growth—where God’s Word is received, practiced, and produces real spiritual change.

FROM THE OLD TESTAMENT

FROM THE NEW TESTAMENT

IMPLICATIONS FOR TODAY

A first step we can take as believers to ensure our hearts are good soil is to evaluate the kinds of influences we allow into our lives. Evil, immoral influences will not draw us closer to God or keep our hearts soft (James 1:21); godly, pure influences will turn us toward God and direct our thoughts to His instruction. We can also model ourselves after the writer of Psalm 119, who pleaded with God to teach him and to give him a heart that loved Scripture. Praying for a soft heart that craves Scripture is something that God will be pleased by and will answer. He desires nothing more than for us to get to know Him and His Word better. Soft hearts require humility and a readiness to put God's Word into practice (Luke 11:28). The more we read Scripture and apply it to our lives, the more we will desire it. Our ultimate reward for a pure heart seeking learning and a deeper connection with God is God Himself—not only here on earth, but for eternity, face to face in Heaven, as Jesus promises to all who follow Him (Matthew 5:8).

UNDERSTAND

REFLECT

ENGAGE