Sunday, July 23, 2017

The mustard seed

+ RWS 765 July 23, 2017, 16th Sunday in Ordinary Time

Gospel: Matthew 13: 24-43
“The kingdom of heaven is like a mustard seed that a person took and sowed in a field.”

Mustard seed
By Bishop Precioso D. Cantillas, SDB, DD
Jesus wants everyone to come to the Kingdom of heaven. He came on earth and became man just for this—bring everyone and everything into God’s kingdom. He fulfills this mission not by uprooting man from his earthly existence but by transforming his daily life into something greater than the natural and ordinary. Jesus transforms nature into a supernatural reality, and ordinary human life and work into experiences beyond their material and temporal value. The little or insignificant human act, like a very small mustard seed, could grow into a huge, fruitful tree, through the saving and sanctifying deeds of Jesus Christ. The Lord wants to take our human existence and activities into His level of divinity. Every act we do, even the most insignificant, when done with Jesus, for Him and through Him, could be very meaningful and valuable in the sight of the Lord. It could help us gain the fruits of eternal life.
      The worker should therefore take advantage of the special offer Jesus is making to everyone who wants to be saved by making the effort to be aware of the Lord’s presence in his daily life and in every place of his work and activities. He could do this by praying habitually, in his thoughts or even accustom to start his daily activities with words of prayer, worship and adoration to God. He could also invite his co-workers to simple acts of prayer in the workplace. The little practices of faith in the presence of God in the places of work and among fellow workers, would be like the mustard seed which could become a huge tree which could provide the workers abundant source of valuable and meaningful work.

 A vision of goodness
 By Teresa R. Tunay, OCDS
Don’t you notice that many times, workplace squabbles between colleagues start from some seemingly small and insignificant thing?  A casual remark, for example, could be perceived in various ways, blown up out of context and proportion and cause misunderstandings.
      There is an exercise used in skills upgrading seminars to show the dynamics of verbal communication.  Ten volunteers stand up front, the lecturer takes Volunteer #1 aside (two meters away) and reads to him a short piece of news which the volunteer must remember without taking notes.  He then transmits what he heard to Volunteer #2 who must do the same until the news reaches Volunteer #10 who must report what he had heard.  Then his report is compared to the original news item that was read to Volunteer #1.  Almost always, the volunteer’s report will be very different from the original.  This is because people differ in perception, interpretation, and memory.
      This exercise illustrates how an apparently harmless comment could—in its multiple retelling—morph into something really destructive.  If something could go from harmless to harmful, something worthless-looking (like a mustard seed) could also grow into something truly beneficial to man.  Thus, it is important to have a vision of goodness to help us conserve our energy for what can lead to its realization.  For followers of Jesus, that vision of goodness could be a world where love, kindness, and compassion reign supreme.  The kingdom of God, indeed!


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