Whether we’re young or old, we stand in need of encouragement. And that is true especially of our spiritual life. In our efforts to follow in the footsteps of Jesus, it’s easy to get discouraged, to feel that we are making little or no progress. If that’s how we feel, today’s readings could serve as a spiritual pick-me-up.
The prophet Ezekiel, who gave us our first reading, lived at one of the most disastrous periods of Israel’s history, when its people had been hauled off into exile far away from their homeland and many were feeling that God had abandoned them. Ezekiel assures them that this is not so. On the contrary, the Lord has a plan for His people. In the Gospel, Jesus tells a parable, a story with a message not unlike that of Ezekiel. He speaks of a tiny mustard seed, which grows so huge that it provides a resting place for all birds of the air. And He tells us that the Kingdom of God is like that. While this parable gives us the big picture of God at work, Jesus tells another parable, which might be described as God’s work in miniature. God works not only on the grand scale, not only in nations and among nations, but also on the small scale, in the lives of individuals. And so Jesus tells the story of a farmer who sows his seed and then, until the harvest arrives, must patiently wait. All he knows is that secretly, night and day, the seed is growing, always growing, though he doesn’t know how; one day it will produce the blade, then the ear and finally the full grain of wheat.
In our lives, too, the Lord has sown His seed and is permanently at work within us. And while we are called to cooperate, the work of salvation is God’s achievement, not ours. In fact God is longing for us to grow in faith and hope and love, in freedom and goodness, more than we do ourselves.