Vatican City, 20 July 2014 (VIS) –
“In a field where the master sows the grain, one night an enemy
sowed tares among them, a plant whose name in Hebrew has the same
root as 'Satan' and refers to the concept of division. The following
morning the servants wanted to remove the weed, but the master
stopped them, 'Lest while you gather up the tares, you root up also
the wheat with them'”. The Holy Father commented on this parable on
Sunday morning, as he appeared at the window of his study to pray
the Angelus with the faithful gathered in St. Peter's Square. “The
parable of the good seed and the tares takes on the problem of evil
in the world”, explained the Pope, “and highlights God's
patience”.
“The teaching of the parable is
twofold. First, it says that the evil in the world does not come from
God, but from His enemy, the devil. This enemy is astute; he has sown
evil amidst the good, so that it is impossible for man to clearly
separate the two; but God, in the end, will do so”. The Holy Father
went on to consider the second theme: “the constrast between the
impatience of the servants and the patient waiting of the master of
the field, who represents God”. He remarked that often we are hasty
to judge, classify and sort the good from the bad, and emphasised
that God, on the other hand, knows how to wait. “He looks at the
'field' of each person's life with patience and mercy. He sees, far
better than we do, the dirt and the evil, but He also sees the seeds
of good and waits confidently for them to mature. God is patient, He
knows how to wait”.
“The attitude of the master is that
of hope, based on the certainty that evil has neither the first nor
the last word. And, thanks to God's patient hope, that same weed may
in time become good grain. But beware: evangelical patience is not
indifference to evil; one must not confuse good and evil! Faced with
the weeds in the world, the Lord's disciple is called to imitate
God's patience, to nurture hope with the support of an unshakeable
faith in the final victory of good, of God. In the end, we will all
be judged by the same yardstick with which we ourselves have judged:
the mercy we have shown to others will be used also with us. Let us
ask Our Lady, our Mother, to help us to grow in patience, hope and
mercy”.
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