The Fifteenth Sunday of Ordinary Time
predmore.blogspot.com
July 16, 2017
Isaiah 55:10-11; Psalm
65; Romans 8:18-23; Matthew 13:1-23
The simplicity
of this Gospel passage can make us complacent. Everyone gets the message that
the seed planted in rich soil has the best chance of surviving and in getting
the best advantage in life, and we know that the one who hears the word of God
and understands it is the seed planted in rich soil. We get that, but few
people get to live in rich soil and optimal conditions. I understand the
exhortation to bring tirelessly the Word of God to others, but let us not make
this Gospel make us feel too good because then it undermines the messy,
ungratifying work to which we are called.
The fact is
we are not called only to care for the seeds that are in this rich, nutritious
soil, meaning that we cannot neglect the seeds that are strewn on the rocky
path or among the weeds and thorns. These less fortunate seeds deserve not just
the same amount of care, but perhaps more tending because their existence in
more precarious. Isaiah reminds us that our God sends the rain and snow down
upon the earth as the Word of Life making it fertile and fruitful. This God
shows no partiality. Well, wait a minute. God shows partiality. God favors
those who are most disadvantaged, those who suffer, those who are lowly and
forgotten and at the margin of existence, and those whose hearts are responsive
in mercy to the misfortune of others. Yes, the Word of God has to be brought to
the rocks and thorns and weeds and to those whose souls are groaning in
distress in hopes that God will hear them.
We then have
to be people who listen to the groans and not the words. In Romans, Paul
reminds us the creation eagerly awaits the revelation of God as it groans in
labor pains. The goal is to live in the glorious freedom of God’s redeeming
actions. The Spirit groans within us as creation’s work still takes place. Listen
for the groans.
Many people
do not articulate their painful experiences or speak of the hurt they carry. We
have to see beyond words and listen to the cry for redemption that comes from
our brother or sister. If there are weeds and thorns around them, then help the
plant get the needed sunlight and rain that feeds them. Help it grow as strong and
tall and as straight as it can in its upward ascent. We cannot control the
weeds and thorns, but we can be resources of comfort and encouragement to those
who need to persevere. We can share our hope and joy because we have learned to
trust in God’s faithfulness to us.
As faithful
churchgoers, we are very aware that most of the work we do it to plant seeds
and then we leave the mystery of the growth up to God. We try our best to shape
and to form souls that are in our care, and we know we have little control over
the choices people make. It bothers us when our children and family members no
longer trust in the church, but we have to be content knowing that we have
given our best to them by teaching them the faith. It just hurts because it is
so personal.
The greater
work we have to do is to examine the walls around us that keep our world fairly
small. The fact is that we often do not go out of our way to encounter people
who are out of our immediate sphere of relationships. We cannot know the
challenges others face if we do not step into their weeds and thorns. We cannot
choke the livelihood of others because of our complacency.
Our faith is
risky. Bringing the Word of God to others can be dangerous for us because we
may get pricked by thorns and tangled in weeds. We still have to go to those
places because it is a place where the vulnerable need the rain of hope and
rays of Christ’s light. We are ministers, not master problem-solvers, and
Christ is among those weeds. Does your faith allow you to follow him wherever
he is?
Scripture
for Daily Mass
First
Reading:
Monday:
(Exodus 1) A new king, who knew nothing of Joseph, came to power in Egypt.
Fearing the numerous people, he set taskmasters over them so they would not
increase.
Tuesday:
(Exodus 2) A Levite woman bore a son and hid him in the reeds where Pharaoh’s
daughter picked him up and raised him in her household.
Wednesday:
(Exodus 3) Moses, while tending his flock in Midian, approached a burning bush
that was not consumed on Mount Horeb. He received his mission to go to Egypt to
set the captives free.
Thursday:
(Exodus 3) Moses heard, “Say to the children of Israel: The God of your fathers
sent me to you. Tell them “I am who am” sent me to you.”
Friday
(Exodus 11) Moses and Aaron performed various wonders in Pharaoh’s presence,
but Pharaoh was obstinate and he would not let the children of Israel leave his
land.
Saturday
(Song of Songs 3) On my bed at night I sought him whom my heart loves.
Gospel:
Monday:
(Matthew 10) I have not come to bring peace, but the sword. Whoever cannot take
up the cross and follow me, cannot be a disciple.
Tuesday:
(Matthew 11) Jesus reproached the towns of Chorazin and Bethsaida because they
did not repent and turn to the Lord.
Wednesday
(Matthew 11) I praise you, Father, Lord of heaven and earth, for though you
have hidden these things from the wise,
you revealed them to the simple.
Thursday
(Matthew 11) Come to me, all you who labor and whose load is heavy, and I will
give you rest. Learn from me for I am meek and humble of heart, and you will
have rest.
Friday
(Matthew 12) Going through a field of grain of the Sabbath, Jesus began to eat.
He challenged the dietary law of the Jews because it did not serve the people’s
needs.
Saturday
(John 20) At the tomb, the gardener asked, “Woman, why are you weeping?” Woman.
Mary. Do not cling to me because I have not yet ascended to my Father.
Saints of the Week
July 16: Our Lady of Mount Carmel is the patronal feast of the Carmelites.
The day commemorates the day Simon Stock was given a brown scapular by Mary in
1251. In the 12th century, Western hermits settled on Mount Carmel overlooking
the plain of Galilee just as Elijah did. These hermits built a chapel to Mary
in the 13th century and began a life of solitary prayer.
July 18: Camillus de Lellis (1550-1614), began his youthful life as a
soldier where he squandered away his father's inheritance through gambling. He
was cared for by Capuchins, but was unable to join them because of a leg
ailment. He cared for the sick in hospitals that were deplorable. He founded an
order that would care for the sick and dying and for soldiers injured in
combat.
July 20: Apollinaris, bishop and martyr (1st century) was chosen directly by
Peter to take care of souls in Ravenna. He lived through the two emperors whose
administrations exiled and tortured him, though he was faithful to his evangelizing
work to his death.
July 21: Lawrence of Brindisi, priest and doctor (1559-1619) was a Capuchin
Franciscan who was proficient in many languages and well-versed in the Bible.
He was selected by the pope to work for the conversion of the Jews and to fight
the spread of Protestantism. He held many positions in the top administration
of the Franciscans.
July 22: Mary Magdalene, apostle (1st century), became the "apostle to
the apostles" as the first witness of the resurrection. Scriptures point
to her great love of Jesus and she stood by him at the cross and brought spices
to anoint his body after death. We know little about Mary though tradition
conflates her with other biblical woman. Luke portrays her as a woman exorcised
of seven demons.
July 23: Bridget of Sweden, religious (1303-1373), founded the Bridgettine Order for men and women in 1370, though today only the women’s portion has survived. She desired to live in a lifestyle defined by prayer and penance. Her husband of 28 years died after producing eight children with Bridget. She then moved to Rome to begin the new order.
This Week in Jesuit History
·
Jul 16, 1766. The death of Giusuppe Castiglione,
painter and missionary to China. They paid him a tribute and gave him a state
funeral in Peking (Beijing).
·
Jul 17, 1581. Edmund Campion was arrested in
England.
·
Jul 18, 1973. The death of Fr. Eugene P Murphy.
Under his direction the Sacred Heart Hour, which was introduced by Saint Louis
University in 1939 on its radio station [WEW], became a nationwide favorite.
·
Jul 19, 1767. At Naples, Prime Minister Tannic,
deprived the Jesuits of the spiritual care of the prisoners, a ministry that
they had nobly discharged for 158 years.
·
Jul 20, 1944. An abortive plot against Adolf
Hitler by Claus von Stauffenberg and his allies resulted in the arrest of Fr.
Alfred Delp.
·
Jul 21, 1773. In the Quirinal Palace, Rome,
Clement XIV signed the Brief for the suppression of the Society.
·
Jul 22, 1679. The martyrdom at Cardiff, Wales,
of St Phillip Evans.
·
Jul 23, 1553. At Palermo, the parish priests
expressed to Fr. Paul Achilles, rector of the college, indignation that more
than 400 persons had received Holy Communion in the Society's church, rather
than in their parish churches.
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