April 6, 2018 at 1:53 p.m.
WORD OF FAITH
Mingling weeds, wheat
One of the most misunderstood Gospel terms is "kingdom of God" or "kingdom of heaven."
It's a very significant concept. Jesus begins His public ministry with the proclamation, "The kingdom of God is close at hand!" To misunderstand the kingdom of God is to misunderstand the historical Jesus' ministry.
Scholars tell us this particular kingdom doesn't refer to the life we're expecting to experience after our physical death. Rather, it's the way Jesus describes God's working in our lives right here and now.
Seeing reality
Jesus' earthly ministry revolved both around making people aware of God's actions and demonstrating the different facets of that kingdom. In teaching about the latter, Jesus frequently employed parables to help His followers see that reality in ways most people never notice.
In Sunday's three kingdom parables (Matthew 13:24-43), Jesus insists we look at the small-to-large aspect of God's presence and also reminds us that God doesn't just single out the good to work with. His presence is to be surfaced in a "mixed world" inhabited by both wheat and weeds.
Jesus warns that a too zealous effort to make God's kingdom perfect on earth will result in lots of good people being uprooted with those we consider to be weeds. God will eventually take care of that part of the kingdom's work. Our job is to keep planting the wheat.
One of our main problems is that we want God's actions to appear against the background of fireworks and blasting trumpets. It takes a special person to surface God working in an action as insignificant as a minute mustard seed or a small hunk of yeast.
In each case, it will grow into something tremendously large, if only we take the time and make the effort to plant or mix those small elements into our daily lives.
That seems to be why both the author of the first reading (Wisdom 12:13,16-19) and St. Paul (Romans 8:26-27) stress our human limitations.
The Wisdom writer zeroes in on God's acting in our lives in spite of all the obstacles we place in His path: "Though you [God] are master of might, you judge with clemency, and with much lenience, you govern us; for power, whenever you will, attends you." Instead of expecting us to be judges, God has a different job description for us: "You taught your people, by these deeds, that those who are just must be kind."
Weeds and wheat
Paul also presumes that strong-willed, judgmental people aren't the individuals Jesus wants to sign up to be proclaimers of God's presence in our world: "The Spirit comes to the aid of our weakness." The Apostle writes: "For we do not know how to pray as we ought, but the Spirit intercedes with inexpressible groaning."
True disciples have to admit they're not even certain themselves what to pray for. Without the Spirit's guidance, they would probably be praying for things which are against God's will.
Getting back to Jesus' wheat and weeds, how can we be comfortable judging others' actions? Only "the one who searches hearts knows what is the intention of the Spirit, because He intercedes for the holy ones according to God's will."
Often, when we tear out the weeds impeding us from what we conceive of as our clear path of growth, we might actually be dead-ending God's plan of growth.
The Christian community is unlike any other organization. It proclaims a kingdom that makes sense only to God -- and to those who give themselves over completely to Him.
(07/17/08)
MORE NEWS STORIES
- Washington Roundup: Breakdown of Trump-Musk relationship, wrongly deported man returned
- National Eucharistic Pilgrimage protests, Wisconsin Catholic Charities, Uganda terrorists thwarted | Week in Review
- Traditional Pentecost pilgrimage comes in middle of heated TLM discussion in French church
- Report: Abuse allegations and costs down, but complacency a threat
- Expectant mom seeking political asylum in US urges protection of birthright citizenship
- Living Pentecost
- The Acts of the Apostles and ‘The Amazing Race’
- Movie Review: Final Destination Bloodlines
- Movie Review: The Ritual
- NJ diocese hopes proposed law will resolve religious worker visa problems
Comments:
You must login to comment.