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Friday, 14 June 2024

11th Sunday Year B, 2024

 

(Ezekiel 17:22-24; 2nd. Corinthians 5:6-10; Mark 4:26-34)

St. Paul, speaking in our second reading today:
 
WE ARE ALWAYS OF GOOD COURAGE;  for we walk by faith, not by sight.  YES, WE ARE OF GOOD COURAGE …  we make it our aim to please Him;

reminds me very much of our Blessed Lord Jesus’ words recorded by St. John in his Gospel (16:33)
In the world you will have tribulation; but TAKE HEART; I have overcome the world.

Actually, the two Greek words translated in the one case by ‘We are always of good courage and in the other by ‘take heart’ are very closely related, so we do well to understand the dictum of St. Paul in accordance with those words of Jesus, because Paul was a Personally chosen disciple of the Lord, and he most certainly did on many occasions –  more  indeed than any of the other apostles -- suffer for Jesus with great courage. His faith and trust in the Lord urged him to ‘take heart’ in whatever adverse situation he might find himself; and that faith and trust, that ‘taking heart, is most certainly what Paul wanted to teach and encourage in his converts, who were being called daily – in accordance with the words of Our Lord quoted above -- to face up to the pagan power of Rome and give witness to the Lord Jesus as true and faithful disciples.  


And what tribulation there is to be found in our world today, dear People of God, for all who are committed disciples of Jesus!!

I will not speak of wars and rumours of wars, of which there are many that are  serious; nevertheless, I do want to highlight the tribulation in the hearts of so many Catholics and Christians, all of them with so much potential for good as disciples of Jesus, but, of whom, far too many have sadly been turned aside from ‘being of good courage’ in Jesus by the solicitations of that despair which abounds in our world and which is at the heart of all the excitement and lust for immediate pleasure and power, and the blatant evil so easily accepted in our days of religious indifference..
Today, change – even disintegration -- is continual and seems to have ever-greater momentum, sweeping aside what had previously seemed established and inviolable; and, as a result, many find it extremely difficult to maintain a reliable, trustworthy, life style, let alone  an abiding  faith in an unseen God.

In such circumstances the temptation is great -- especially for the young and the needy -- to grasp, seize, what the world offers here and now, before it disappears, before it is lost without their having tasted of it.! And how alien such a world portrays our Christian religion and Catholic faith which teaches us to commit ourselves wholeheartedly to, and learn to find our total joy and peace in, promises given by Jesus, which seem to be only empty, pie-in-the-sky promises, for those denizens of our brave, new, world unable to even conceive of spiritual blessings!

Dear People of God, when power and influence can be, and frequently are, bought by money; when multitudes are swept along by popular tides of mindless enthusiasm when rights are proclaimed -- many of them quite ludicrous -- and responsibilities ignored; when might is right and popularity cannot be challenged; when people are cajoled and led astray by preachers of holiness-without-commitment, and addicts of faith-without-obedience; THEN, would-be-disciples of Jesus find it difficult to  hear and recognize the soul-calming voice  of the unseen, but all-seeing and all-powerful God Who created us.  And in such a situation, it is vitally important for us-who-believe to hear, and take heart from, the concordant voices of our Lord Jesus and His most faithful disciple St. Paul in today’s readings:

These things I have spoken to you, that in Me you may have peace. Be of good cheer, I have overcome the world.
We are always of good courage, although we know that while we are at home in the body we are away from the Lord.

The believer - Paul went on to say - is confident by reason of his faith: he trusts in the goodness of the God he already knows; and is well-pleased, to look forward to and hope for, the promises of ‘the Friend’ he serves, the Lord and Saviour he seeks to please, and  longs above all to love, wholeheartedly:


We walk by faith not by sight, and we make it our aim to please Him.  For we must all appear  before the judgement seat of Christ
 
Now, that Christian trust and contentment is pictured in Our Lord’s first parable today:
The kingdom of God is as if a man should scatter seed on the ground, and should sleep by night and rise by day, and the seed should sprout and grow, he himself does not know how.  
The sower does not know how the planting he has made develops to fruition: he continues to play his part, however, by waiting for the Lord and trusting in Him, before ultimately reaping the resultant harvest.

Dear People of God, too few supposed ‘sowers’ of God’s word, too few such preachers of Jesus’ Gospel, seem to know how to wait for the Lord and trust in His word!  So many ‘high-ups’ -- for example, in the ‘intellectual’ German Church corrupted by power-pence and personal pride -- want to ‘adapt’ Catholic traditional, centuries-long  Apostolic teaching, to the ‘needs’ of  certain ‘modern’ and most-important members of the flock of their pasture -- the providers of their ‘power pence’, the Deutsch Mark! -- who apparently find themselves in moral situations never before known, experienced, thought of, or even imagined, before the German hierarchy ‘discovered’ their proliferance. 

Dear People of God, what, moral, sexual, situations were not experienced in pagan, all- powerful, world capital, Rome; were not thought of in homosexual Greece and Athens;  have not been imagined by exotic potentates all over the world and throughout the ages??  Why are today’s so learned  German leaders (said, by the way, in a popular dictum , to go down deepest but come up dirtiest!) so willing to accept those modern situations supposedly unknown to, and unforeseeable by, the Lord and Saviour of mankind, Our Lord Jesus  Christ!!

Jesus gives special emphasis to trust in and contentment before God in His second parable,  where He no longer speaks of ‘scattered seed’  but of  one single mustard seed, the smallest seed of all.  Telling us that, the initial apparent insignificance of any work intended for God’s glory and His people’s well-being is NO HINDRANCE to the final realization of God’s plan; that a seed so very tiny  can indeed grow into the biggest shrub of all; and that what Jesus requires in all those who would serve Him is patient humility.

So, there we have Jesus’ teaching for all who would serve Him in today’s almost disastrous world: just two little,  complementary, parables, recommending two absolutely essential virtues, life-qualities,  for all who aspire to be His Christian and Catholic disciples today.  Do what you can – however small it may seem;  wait patiently, trustingly, confidently, humbly, for the most Holy Spirit, God’s GIFT, to bring about – in His time – that work of God you want to see effected.

Trust in the LORD, and do good; dwell in the land, and befriend faithfulness.  Delight yourself in the LORD, and He will give you the desires of your heart.   Commit your way to the LORD, trust in Him, and He will act.   He will bring forth your righteousness as the light, and your justice as the noonday.  Be still before the Lord and wait patiently for Him.        (Psalm 37:3-7)

If you were of the world, the world would love you as its own; but because you are not of the world but I chose you out of the world, therefore the world hates you.  Remember the word that I said to you: 'A servant is not greater than his master.' If they persecuted Me, they will also persecute you.

I have said these things to you, that in Me you may have peace. In the world you will have tribulation.  But TAKE HEART, I have overcome the world.       (John 15:19-20 & 16:33)

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