The Eleventh Sunday
in Ordinary Time
June 16, 2024
by Rev. Jose Maria Cortes, F.S.C.B.
Pastor of the Church of St. Peter
North St. Paul, Minnesota
Index
Sunday Reading
Meditations
In the first reading, Our Lord says that he is going to make an enormous tree from a "tender shoot," where many birds will find shelter. It will be a majestic cedar or Lebanon planted on a high and lofty mountain, which symbolizes God's kingdom, the kingship of Christ that will be manifested at the end of times.
Now he Kingdom of God seems like nothing compared with the powers of this world, but at the end of history, all the terrestrial kingdoms - "birds of every kind" - will dwell beneath the cedar.
In today's Gospel, Jesus tells us two parables about the Kingdom of God. In the first parable, he says that the kingdom grows like seeds scattered by a sower. A small seed sprouts and grows by itself. The seed multiplies into many without any intervention from man. However, the farmer must create the conditions. He prepares the land and sows the seeds, but their growth is not n his hands and transcends him. When the grain is ripe, he harvests the fields with a heart full of gratitude for their mysterious fruitfulness. As today's psalm says: "It is good to give thanks to the LORD, to sing praise to your name Most High" (Ps 92:2).
This parable shows that God's action is at the center. The farmer can prepared the land and harvest crops, but the most important part - the mysterious growth of the seed - does not depend on him.
In the second parable, Jesus uses he image of the growth of a mustard seed. This very small seed becomes the largest of the plants in the orchard. In the mustard seed, we see the smallness of the human condition and the greatness of God's action. Indeed, Our Lord transforms what is small into what is great.
In order to cooperate with God, we need the virtue of humility to accomplish his design.
Humility is not innate in us. Pride is more natural. Since the fall of our first parents, we tend to place ourselves at the center, in an attempt to occupy God's rightful; place. We need to descend from the false height of our pride to the true level of our reality.
In the first reading, God says through the prophet Ezekiel: "I, the LORD, bring low the high tree, lift high the lowly tree, wither up the green tree, and make the withered tree bloom" (Ez 17:24). We need the experience of being humbled in order to find the truth of ourselves. Being humbled is certainly not a pleasant experience! However, it is necessary. We need to descend in order to be exalted by God.
We are able to accept being humbled if we live our lives in search of Jesus' love. In the second reading, Saint Paul says: "We aspire to please him" (2 Cor 5:9). This aspiration is what helps us accept humiliation. The apostle declares that we walk by faith, not by sight, which means that in this life we are pilgrims on the path of the purification of our hearts.
In order to do great things, because what we all want to do are great things, not small things, Our Lord uses what is small. Humility is the path to greatness.
Last Thursday was the feast pf St. Anthony of Padua. He is a great teacher of humility. Almost all of his sermons speak about humility.
Humility is the path to greatness, as exemplified by Mary's life. In her Magnificat, she says: "He has regarded the low estate of his handmaiden. For behold, hence forth all generations will call me blessed; for he who is mighty has done great things for me" (Lk 1:48-49). May the example and intercession of Our Blessed Mother help us to humble ourselves in order to find our True greatness in God. Amen.