NB. From 2007 by request. . .readings are proper to the feast.
St. Ignatius of Loyola: Exo 33.7-11, 34.5-9, 28 and Mt 13.36-43
Fr. Philip N. Powell, OP
Church of the Incarnation, University of Dallas
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St. Ignatius of Loyola: Exo 33.7-11, 34.5-9, 28 and Mt 13.36-43
Fr. Philip N. Powell, OP
Church of the Incarnation, University of Dallas
Every
gardener, every farmer, every owner of a yard knows that when you till
up a patch of ground, fertilize it, water it, sow it carefully with
seed, there’s an excellent chance that along with the strong stems and
healthy leaves of the desired plants, there will grow choking weeds,
undesirable sprouts that steal water, food, and sunlight from the Good
Plants you intend to enjoy. Weeds are as inevitable as bugs! No
lover of a neat, manicured lawn, however, just leaves the weeds to take
root and flourish and flower, seeding all over carefully cultivated
ground. Weeds are pulled, poisoned, chopped, hoed out, and cut off. And then these thieves are piled high, allowed to dry, and burned. Jesus
tells the disciples that there will be those in his garden who try to
steal Life from those who wish to flourish in his Word. These thieves he calls, “The Children of the Evil One” and they are sown by the Devil. What do we do with the weeds among us?
Think back to the parable where Jesus introduces the idea of the weeds among the good plants. The planter’s servants ask their master if they should pull the weeds before the harvest. The master says, “No, let them grow and I will tell the harvesters to cut them, separate them out, and burn them.” Why does he leave the weeds? Why does he let them flourish, potentially damaging the good crop? The
master reasons, “Pulling the weeds while the good plants are young
might damage the good plants more than the weeds ever could.” So, he lets both the good and the evil mature in his fertile ground, knowing that the evil will be dealt with in the end.
Does this parable need any further explanation? No, I don’t think so. But it does provoke a question for us: for
those of us who tend to think of ourselves as Good Plants, how do we
deal with the obvious weeds among us? Notice the dangerous assumption in
this question: that we know how to identify weeds! Now,
there are extreme cases of Weeds Among Us—for example, those who would
see us become unitarian-universalists; or, those who would turn us into
new-age Buddhists or Mother Goddess worshippers; or those who would the
whittle the church into a tiny remnant of apocalyptic survivors. We
may also readily point out the self-proclaimed prophets of public
dissent and those who mock the sacraments—especially Holy Orders—by
play-acting at ordination rites. And there are
those who willfully take on the identity of Weeds by throwing themselves
in front of any live camera or open mike and denouncing the Church’s
centuries old moral tradition in the name of "liberty." Beyond these
extremes—few and far between they are!—Good Plants and Weeds can look a
lot alike. So, in the end we must humbly submit
to the infallible judgment of our Lord in plucking the weeds and leaving
the righteous at the time of harvest.
We aren’t helpless against the noxious effects of the weeds right now, however. True,
we must be patient in waiting for the weeds to be pulled; but, we can
minimize their damage to the garden by carefully tending to that which
makes the garden fertile in the first place: God’s gift of growing His love in us. No, this is not some lame deflection or crippled sentimentality put up to serve a faint heart too weak to fight the Weeds! There is nothing faint-hearted or weak or sentimental about God’s love being perfected in us. Jesus says that on the day of harvest, “the righteous will shine like the sun in the Kingdom of their Father.” No darkness, no shadow, no fleck of sin. Nothing contrary to the brilliance of the Father’s glory. Nothing stands against His end, His means, His perfection. For us then, we need only be living Christs for others in order to show the weeds their fate. While
they suck life from the air and poison the ground, the Good Plants must
be more deeply rooted, stand taller, produce more and better fruit, and
be more beautiful in flower than any weed can.
Being right is not our witness. Being faithful to the end…that’s the testimony that will turn heads and change hearts.
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