11th Sunday-Year B
Ez. 17: 22-24
Psalm 92
2 Cor. 5: 6-10
Mk. 4:26-34
Be a Seed Planted in Christ
Beloved in Christ, last week Monday, After the Noon Mass, one of our Parishioners, Bernie, approached me and congratulated me for taking very good care of some tomatoes plants she had given me two weeks ago to plant in our parish garden. And I with the tomatoes seed. When she praised me, my face fell because I had forgotten to plant the tomatoes and they had died. So, knowing I could not lie to her, I told her I was sorry, but I forgot to plant what she had given me, and the plants had died. She laughed and said, "Oh Father, that's okay, don't worry! Just look for new tomatoes plants and plant them." I had messed up, but Bernie gave me a new chance. Beloved, I remembered this encounter because our readings today talk about how God has invited us out of love to help build his Kingdom of peace, love, and justice on earth. Still, how we always mess up, and God always gives us a chance to make things new.
The first reading talks about how God can bring life out of the most rotten and hopeless situation when we place those situations in his hands. The reading is an allegory, a song that was written by the prophet Ezekiel to tell a story of how God works among his people to restore their lives. Any allegory has hidden meaning that can be confusing if you don't know the story that it is referring to, so let's delve a little bit into the story in the background of our first reading today. The story behind this reading was the Israelites coming under constant attacks from Egypt and Babylon. The trees described in the first reading are the people of Israel who were captured and taken as slaves to Babylon. Ezekiel, who was a priest in the Temple, was captured. He lost the Temple, so he lost his job. He lost his nation, national pride, and prestige and became a slave in a foreign country (Babylon). Yet, in the midst of all these evil and problems in his life and that of his country, the prophet says Israel is not just a failed harvest but still contains a seed and that if only the people would understand their lives as a seed and place that seed in the hand of God, He would bring something great and more beautiful our of that seed.
Beloved, we can identify with the situation in our first reading. When you look at our world today, it seems like everything is falling apart. The world might seem like a failed harvest. The conflict, economic crisis around the world, the evil of human trafficking, abortions, broken families and dreams, nations turning away from God, political powers are persecuting the Church in many places, etc. Not only does our world seem to be falling apart, but our Church also is in crisis because we, the priest, have betrayed the Church with our infidelity and sexual sins. Many of the faithful have also failed to live their baptismal calling in the family and places where they work. When you look at all this, as well as the challenges of your personal life, you may be tempted to see the world as a failed harvest. But the prophet Ezekiel tells us that our world, Church, and life are not just a failed harvest. There is still some good seed in the world, Church, and in us that God can still use to build something beautiful.
That is the seed Jesus is talking about in the gospel. Jesus invites us to look at our lives at every given moment as seeds that can still bring out something beautiful even when it does not seem like it. But he reminds us that it is only when we plant that seed (our lives) in Him, the rich soil of God. If we can return the world to Christ, if we can return the Church to Christ, if we can return our lives to Christ, God will surprise us and make something more beautiful even out of our broken world, broken Church, and broken lives.
St/ Paul reminds us in the second reading that if we walk by faith in Christ and do not depend solely on our human wisdom, the best is yet to come. Beloved, despite all the evil and problems in our world, the problems in the Church, and problems in our personal lives today, there is still some good seed in us. Only if we will replant that seed in Christ. This rich soil yields fruits. God will turn things around and make our world more beautiful, our Church more beautiful, and our personal lives more beautiful. May the Lord lead us by the light of his truth to seek and find the narrow way that leads to life in Christ.
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