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Benedictine Sisters of FL

Holy Name Monastery
Founded 1889

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Kingdom

Be Patient! It’s a Waiting Game.

June 18, 2024 by Holy Name Monastery Leave a Comment

Mark’s Gospel is the shortest of the four Gospels.  It is full of parables, stories told by Jesus, the best of Storytellers. With some of His stories, Jesus uses elaborate details, making it easy to understand His point. Today’s “riddle” sounds like heaven is a “field of dreams.”  This is a field where a man one day casts seeds with abandon, unmindful of whether they fall on soil that is good or not-so-good.  That night he sleeps unaware that something mysterious is happening in the soil.  Violá!  Overnight the earth has sprung forth blade, and ear and then the fruit!  Jesus queries exactly what our curious minds may be wondering: “To what shall we liken the kingdom of God?”   Jesus floats another riddle for our consideration.  The kingdom can be compared to the smallest of seeds that when nurtured grows into the largest of trees.  Literally, the word parable means “a riddle.”  Jesus told more than 40 riddles or parables during his ministry.  Usually when a person tells you a riddle, they eventually tell you the answer.  But Jesus only explained one parable to the crowds – the parable of the Sower and the Seed.  Mark says Jesus explained everything to his disciples in private and they did not share for future generations the meaning of all the parables. Then, Jesus ascended into heaven and took the answers with him!   So that left the later disciples, and us, with a lot of figuring out to do.

Let’s start with one of the most amazing seeds in the world:  Chinese bamboo.  The seedling lies buried in the soil for five long years before any sprout appears above ground.  It seems dormant, or at least stunted.  But don’t be deceived into thinking it’s a lost cause.  The seedling requires constant cultivation during gestation, needing watering and fertilization on a regular basis. Then it requires much patience!  Wait, wait, wait.  It will make up for lost time.  When the bamboo seedling finally emerges from the ground, it grows at an astonishing rate, ninety feet into the air in just six weeks.  That’s fifteen feet a week, more than two feet a day, two inches every hour.  Once it finally gets going, you can almost watch it grow before your very eyes!  Why does it take so long to emerge, and grow so fast once it does?  Plant experts say that during its first five years, the seed is busy building an elaborate root system underground.  This is what enables it to grow ninety feet in six weeks.

Think of yourself as a “Chinese bamboo”.  Growth in us within God’s Kingdom is in a similar pattern.  We take a long time to emerge.  Sometimes it takes so long we wonder, “Did the seed of God’s kingdom planted in me at Baptism ever take root?  Maybe it fell on a rock in my heart and died.  Maybe it got choked by the thorns of my sins.”  More often than not the seed of God’s Kingdom is building an elaborate root system.

This means that we need to trust God who in the first place planted the seed of the Kingdom in us. God understands what’s happening inside us because he sees into the heart, even if we can’t.  We also need to be patient with ourselves and overly generous with mercy and compassionate with others.  Even though the Kingdom may not seem to have taken root in you, and you don’t seem to be getting any holier, there’s no need to be discouraged.  Growth may not be visible for a long time, but eventually something wonderful, beautiful and multi-faceted will emerge.

 

~Reflection by Sister Roberta Bailey, OSB

 

 

 

 

First Reading:   Ezekiel 17:22-24         Second Reading:  2 Corinthians 5:6-10
Gospel:   Mark 4:26-34
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Filed Under: Blog, Front Page, Homily Tagged With: bamboo, Chinese bamboo, God, Jesus, Kingdom, Mark, seedling

Better than a Biscuit

July 21, 2020 by Holy Name Monastery Leave a Comment

I invite you to consider, as you do lectio with this Gospel: Which am I?  Am I the sower, the seed, the soil or a plain old weed?  Or perhaps it would be better to ask: when am I like a weed needling others or jabbing them like a thorn?  When have I been the sower of good seed?  How have I been the seed that blossomed in another?  And, please, God, may I always be good soil, receptive to the good seed you freely scattered all around me… often right at my feet in the rhythm of my day.  May my ears be attentive to your voice, my eyes only take in the good and my voice be an instrument to further Your kingdom.

In Jesus’ story the sower spreads good seed in the field expecting a healthy wheat harvest.  But in the dark of night an enemy comes and sows weeds in among the wheat.  So when the seedlings begin to sprout the workers in the field see that something is amiss.  Those are not all wheat plants – what are they?  How’d they get there?

A little knowledge of botany will help us.   Matthew uses a Greek word for a botanical term that can be interpreted: wild rice grasses, or cockles.  Maybe in Florida it would remind us “sandspurs” – those icky, prickery round blooms – hard-to-get off with bare hands.  [A tip: wet your fingers before you try to grab hold of a sandspur.]  The difference between the wheat and cockles is evident only when the plants mature and the ears begin to appear.  With real wheat the ears will be so heavy they droop.  Cockle, on the other hand, has ears that stand up straight.

Now, when the field hands call this to the owner’s attention they are advised: “Let them grow up together until the harvest.”  That reminded me of the expression “accept the thorns among the roses” or “You gotta take a little bad along with the good.”  Intrigued, and with a little time to spare, I checked what Google could turn up.  This next one, Google said, only a born and bred Vermonter would say: “just because a cat has her kittens in the oven don’t make them biscuits.”

That reminded me of story that was related to me recently by a pastor-farmer-friend who had visited in a nearby town.  Before the days of COVID, he’d accepted an invitation to join the ministerial breakfast meeting.  It being March 16, and the feast of St. Isadore the farmer, they’d called upon a local pastor who was a member of one of Florida’s oldest ranching families to offer the invocation and meal blessing.

He was decked out in his typical attire: bib overalls, a baggy denim shirt, grasping a floppy straw hat.  “Please bow your heads as we ask God’s blessing,” he began and then waited for his table companion to clear his voice.  (Or, was he stifling a laugh?)  Our prayer leader went on: in a strong, reverent voice:

“Lord, you know I hate buttermilk”.  My friend opened one eye to peek at   the farmer and wondered where this was going.

The farmer loudly proclaimed, “And, Lord, I hate lard.”  Now my pastor-friend was growing concerned – wondered if those who knew him realized their friend was losing it.   Without missing a beat, the farmer continued, “And Lord, you know I don’t much care for raw white flour.”

My friend again opened an eye, but this time to glance around at everyone seated with him at table.  He realized that he wasn’t the only one beginning to feel uncomfortable.  The Pastor-Farmer just went right on: “But Lord, when you mix them all together and bake them, I do love those warm fresh biscuits.”

He paused a second,  lifted a hand, raised his eyes, and with a beatific smile, prayed on …”So Lord, when things come up that we don’t like, when life gets hard, when we don’t understand what you’re saying to us, help us to just relax and wait until you are done mixing.  It will probably be even better than biscuits.”   AMEN

~Reflection by Sister Roberta Bailey, OSB, Prioress

 

Wisdom 12-13, 16-19  Romans 8:26-27       Matthew 13:24-30

 

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Filed Under: Blog, Front Page, Homily Tagged With: Biscuits, God, good seed, Jesus, Kingdom, Lord, Matthew, seed, soil, sower

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