Vatican City, 14 June 2015 (VIS) –
The effectiveness of the Word of God and the needs of His Kingdom,
which are the reasons for our hope and our efforts throughout history
were the theme of the Pope's reflection before today's Sunday
Angelus. To the thousands of faithful gathered in St. Peter's Square,
Francis explained the two brief parables from the Gospel: the seed
that grows in the earth alone and the tiny mustard seed that becomes
the largest plant.
“In the first parable, our attention
is placed on the fact that the seed, thrown on the ground, takes root
and develops by itself, whether the farmer sleeps or is awake. The
farmer trusts in the inner strength of the seed itself and of the
fertility of the ground. In the language of the Gospel, the seed is
the symbol of the Word of God, Whose fruitfulness is recalled by this
parable. Just as the humble seed that develops in the ground, so the
Word operates with God's power in the heart of those who listen. God
entrusted His Word to our earth, that is, to each one of us with out
concrete humanity”.
The second parable uses the image of
the mustard seed that, despite being the smallest of the seeds, grows
to become “the largest of plants”. “Thus is the Kingdom of God:
a humanly small and apparently irrelevant reality. To become a part
of it, one must be poor of heart; not trusting in one's own
abilities, but rather in the power of God's love; not acting so as to
be important in the eyes of the world, but precious in the eyes of
God, who prefers the simple and the humble. When we live like this,
the strength of Christ erupts through us and transforms what is small
and modest into a reality that leavens the entire mass of the world
and of history”.
The teaching of these two parables,
Francis underlined, is that the Kingdom of God requires our
collaboration, but it is above all the initiative and gift of the
Lord. “Our feeble work, seemingly small faced with the complexity
of the problems of the world, if embedded into that of God, no longer
fears difficulty. The victory of the Lord is sure: His love will lead
every seed of good present on the earth to germinate and grow. It
opens us up to trust and hope, despite the tragedies, injustice and
suffering we encounter. The seed of good and of peace germinates and
develops because it is ripened by the merciful love of God”.
“May the Holy Virgin, who received as
'fertile earth' the seed of the divine Word, sustain us in this hope
that never lets us down”.
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