Throughout the Gospels, we observe Christ using various methods for proclaiming the Good News to the people of His time. He can certainly be direct in His words, yet many times He speaks in a hidden way. This latter method has come to be called the parables, as is evidenced in our reading from the Gospel of Mark for this Sunday. In fact, St. Mark hints at Christ’s use of parables at the end of our reading by saying that “with many such parables he spoke the word to them as they were able to understand it” (Mk 4:33). Yet these sayings we have just heard seem rather trite to us. All this talk of seeds and growth seems rather antiquated in our day. Yet, however out of date the Gospel may seem, it is still filled with timeless wisdom and insight for those who are able to understand it.
Take the first parable of the seed to start. Christ shows us the means whereby our belief in God, our faith in Christ, is meant to proceed. First, we see the seed of faith planted in the earth of our hearts by the Holy Spirit whom we received at baptism and confirmation. We must be ever mindful that faith is a gift from God; it is not something which we have earned on our own, but is that most essential of graces which God pours upon His people so that our sanctification may begin. We then see this seed begin to grow in short succession, from the very first seedlings to the full plant. St. Gregory the Great sees in this parable the progression of man in holiness and perfection. He teaches that “When therefore we conceive good desires, we put seed into the ground; when we begin to work rightly, we are the blade. When we increase to the perfection of good works, we arrive at the ear; when we are firmly fixed in the perfection of the same working, we already put forth the full grain [corn in old translation] in the ear.” [see the Catena Aurea]
Yet all of this cannot be done without the benefit of good earth. Certainly, faith begins as a gift of God upon the soul, but the soul must cooperate in union with God. If there is no cooperation, no desire on the part of the soul, the seed of faith will remain fallow upon the hardened earth. If the seed is to progress from the blade to the ear to the grain, there must be a capacity within the earth to nourish the seed and provide strength for the roots necessary for growth. So is it in the soul of every Christian; we must be open to receiving the gift of faith and letting it produce fruit in our lives.
If we are not open, then all is for nothing. But if we are open, if we receive faith willingly and let it blossom, it will spread immensely, as the second parable demonstrates. For the faith to which we cling is so small; it rests only in the person and actions of Christ our Lord, most specifically in His Passion, Death, and Resurrection. Yet, if we truly believe in this tiny kernel of faith, this small seed of the Gospel, if we truly take to heart the full implications of this word proclaimed to us by the Church, we would be transformed into great saints. For in the lives of the saints, we see the full impact of the Gospel carried out in every manner of life. From the early martyrs to the great confessors and virgins throughout the ages to the humble little souls of ordinary Christians, the mustard seed of the Gospel produces immense fruit, as Ezechiel prophesied in our first reading.
Saint Paul highlights this result in our second reading by focusing on the perspective of being absent from Christ, who has ascended to His holy throne. Indeed, we sometimes stumble about in our lives in a desire to see more clearly. Yet the Apostle reminds us that we should have our sights set not on remaining close to the earth, close to our current body, but to set our sights on the heights of heaven, on desiring to be united more with Christ. He brings to mind for the Corinthians the reality of death and judgment, that we will all receive the fruits of our labors, either the good for eternal joy, or the evil in eternal punishment.
How do we avoid the evil that will lead to eternal punishment? By listening to what Christ and His Church teach us on what is a sin. How do we do the good which leads to eternal joy? By listening to what Christ and His Church teaches is not only not a sin, but is in fact good and holy. It is through the Church that we are able to understand better and more completely what it is that Christ taught and continues to teach us about the path of holiness. This is above all the method whereby we become the good earth capable of supporting the seed of faith in its means of growth. We must listen, just as the Jews of Christ’s era listened to His words and were converted. In fact, this capacity to listen is what helped the Twelve Apostles become the foundation of the Church, the bedrock upon which the Church spread throughout the world and continues to spread even in our own day. To truly listen means to believe the word spoken and to then let it flow into every aspect of your life.
Let us begin to believe once more in the salvation of God won for us through the Passion of Christ. Let us believe in the glorious resurrection and the hope of eternal life which Christ offers us. Let us then put this belief into practice, by desiring to know God more completely, loving Him and adoring Him as a result, and beginning to serve Him who first served us in His earthly life. Do not let the seed of faith fall fallow in the earth of your hearts, but let it begin to take root and grow. Believe not in what the sinful world tells you about the ease of life and the desire for comfort, but seek the greater comfort of the life to come. Understand the parables of Christ and begin to let them blossom in your own lives, so that you may receive not the punishment of a fruitless and faithless life, but the reward of eternal joy in the unfiltered and incomprehensible radiance of God.
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