Ezekiel 17:22-24
Psalm 92
2 Corinthians 5:6-10
Mark 14:26-34
"What image will help to present the reign of God?"
Jesus asked a question to the crowd: "What image will help to present the reign of God?"
After posing this rhetorical question, He presented a parable of the mustard seed. Previous to both the question and the parable of the mustard seed, He also presented another parable: the parable of the seeds growing quietly while the sower went about doing his other duties. Jesus poses parables to the people with commonplace realities as the subject and the context, so that they can understand better what He was pointing to. Both the parables of the seed growing quietly and the mustard seed used the image of "seed" as an analogy to the reign of God which the Lord Jesus wanted to point to. The first parable used seeds that produced a wheat field ready for harvest, while the second parable used a mustard seed that grew into the largest of shrubs - sheltering the birds of the sky.
The seeds in the first parable produced food, while the seed in the second parable produced shelter. The gospel helps us to see that the reign of God provides both food and shelter for all its subjects. The food it produces is an imperishable food, and the shelter it provides gives refuge from what can harm. Jesus wants us to see that the reign of God is like a father-king that provides for all the children of His family: both nourishing food and a secure shelter. This Father-King provides everything for us. As His children fed and secured, we are also encouraged to share these provisions with others - that they too may belong to the reign of God.
Catholics are privileged to have a Church that has provided and continues to provide countless generations with the imperishable food in the Eucharist and the refuge needed to be healed from the harm done by sin and potential harm in the future. As nourishment and healing is provided in the Eucharist, the priest extends this "nourishment and healing" to others when he says that we are to love and serve the Lord at the end of the Mass. All baptized lay faithful received this "missionary mandate". And it is a simple mission that can be done in the very circumstances of the lives of every lay person. Like the seed that grows quietly under the earth, every good deed done in family and workplace blooms forth in peace. And like the mustard seed that grows into a big tree, the family and the workplace becomes a shelter in God's protection and love.
The seeds in the first parable produced food, while the seed in the second parable produced shelter. The gospel helps us to see that the reign of God provides both food and shelter for all its subjects. The food it produces is an imperishable food, and the shelter it provides gives refuge from what can harm. Jesus wants us to see that the reign of God is like a father-king that provides for all the children of His family: both nourishing food and a secure shelter. This Father-King provides everything for us. As His children fed and secured, we are also encouraged to share these provisions with others - that they too may belong to the reign of God.
Catholics are privileged to have a Church that has provided and continues to provide countless generations with the imperishable food in the Eucharist and the refuge needed to be healed from the harm done by sin and potential harm in the future. As nourishment and healing is provided in the Eucharist, the priest extends this "nourishment and healing" to others when he says that we are to love and serve the Lord at the end of the Mass. All baptized lay faithful received this "missionary mandate". And it is a simple mission that can be done in the very circumstances of the lives of every lay person. Like the seed that grows quietly under the earth, every good deed done in family and workplace blooms forth in peace. And like the mustard seed that grows into a big tree, the family and the workplace becomes a shelter in God's protection and love.