Jesus did much of his public preaching and
teaching in rural Galilee. So it’s no surprise so many of his images and
parables are agricultural in inspiration. That may make obvious sense, but it
also may make them hard for most of us in contemporary society, whose background is non-agricultural, whose background is completely urban, to
relate to. To me as a non-gardener, gardening seems incredibly complex,
physically demanding, and just generally difficult. Wy would anyone want to do it? To me as a non-farmer, farming
also seems if anything even more complex and difficult. And, of course, real
farming really is hard work. Only non-farmers romanticize farming! But the parables we just heard [Mark 4:26-32]
focus less on the human work involved and more on a more mysterious and silent
part of the process. The kingdom of God, Jesus says, is as if someone scattered
seed on the land and over time watched it sprout and grow and yield fruit for
the harvest. If that first parable
focuses on the mysterious, silent, and patient process by which the seed once
originally sown sprouts and grows on its own, the second parable contrasts the
full fruition of God’s kingdom with its seemingly modest and maybe even
inauspicious beginnings.
Obviously,
a lot of what we do in life involves effort, even strenuous effort at times.
Yet we all know that sometimes there is only just so much which work and effort
can accomplish. However ambitious and elaborate our plans, sometimes all we can
actually do is plant some seed, so to speak, and then wait patiently to see
what happens. If that is true enough in ordinary life and in our ordinary
activities, how much more true is it in the mission of the Church? Much of what
we do in Church life and in ministry is like that, planting seeds so to speak, sometimes in lots
of different ways, and then waiting – patiently and hopefully – to see what
happens.
Yet even
in the first parable about the seed growing of its own accord, the farmer does
do his part. There is activity on the farmer’s part, just as there is activity
on the Church’s part - on our part - in the coming of God’s kingdom. The farmer
makes his contribution, as God expects all of us to do. But, in both cases, the
crucial action is God’s action – action, which occurs mysteriously and may
mainly seem hidden.
When
I was a student, I remember being surprised to discover that the first of these
parables is unique to the Gospel of Mark, and is not included (as most of
Mark’s other material is) in either Matthew or Luke. That seemed strange to me
then and still seems so now, although all these years later I have no more or
better insight as to why that should be. But, however obscure this parable, however easy it
may be for us to overlook, I think this remains a really powerful parable. It speaks
to something many modern people in particular seem to worry about – God’s
silence, his apparent absence from the world. The point of the parable (or so
it seems to me) is to acknowledge God’s silence - but also to exclude our misunderstanding or misinterpreting that silence as being due to inactivity on God’s part. Silent
God may well be, but absent he is not.
Both
parables are about the wonderful way the kingdom of God grows – unstoppably
mysteriously in the first parable, unstoppably successfully in the second. So, despite whatever other human narratives it
may be competing with for our attention, the narrative story-line of the
kingdom of God is unstoppable mystery and unstoppable success.
Echoing
Ezekiel’s prophecy of making the withered tree bloom [Ezekiel 17:22-24], Jesus’ parable
illustrates the unstoppable mystery and unstoppable success of God’s kingdom in
the mustard seed’s growth into such a great plant that all the birds of the sky
can find space for themselves in its large branches. What an amazing
aspiration! What an appropriate image for what the church is called to be in
our time and place - what we, as Church, are called to be in our conflicted, fragmented, strife-torn
world!
Our
culture encourages us to be busy all the time and to be efficient,
accomplishing a lot in our busy work – often at considerable cost to our
health, to our happiness, to family, and to community. But, just as the farmer
in the parable scatters seed on faith, with no certain knowledge of how it will
grow, the Church has to sow the seed of God’s word in the world, not knowing
how or when our efforts will find fulfillment but confident about the coming of
God’s kingdom in our lives and in our world – the blessed hope and the coming
of our Savior, Jesus Christ, that we say we pray for in every Mass.
Homily for the 11th Sunday in Ordinary Time, Immaculate Conception Church, Knoxville, TN, June 17, 2018.
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