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Thursday, July 9, 2026

The Wheat, the Weeds, and the Patient Heart of God (Year A - 16th Sunday - Ordinary Time)

 

Homily on Matthew 13:24–43

"The Wheat, the Weeds, and the Patient Heart of God"

Today's Gospel from Matthew is one of the most realistic and hopeful teachings Jesus ever gives us.

In just a few short parables, Jesus speaks about good and evil, patience, judgment, faith, and the mysterious way God works in our lives.

He tells us about wheat and weeds growing together in the same field, about a tiny mustard seed that becomes a great tree, and about yeast that quietly transforms an entire batch of dough.

At first, these parables may seem unrelated. But together they reveal a powerful truth: God is always at work, even when we cannot see it.

And that is good news, because many of us come here today carrying burdens, disappointments, worries, and questions such as:

"Lord, where are You in all of this?"

Well, Today's Gospel answers that question.

Jesus begins by telling us about a farmer who sows good seed in his field.

But while everyone is asleep, an enemy comes and sows weeds among the wheat.

When the servants discover the weeds, they are shocked.

"Master, did you not sow good seed in your field? Where have the weeds come from?"

If we're honest, that question sounds very familiar.

"Lord, if You are good, why is there suffering?"

"Why are there divisions in families?"

"Why do good people get sick?"

"Why are there wars, addictions, and broken relationships?"

"Why do I still struggle with the same sins after all these years?"

Jesus answers simply:

"An enemy has done this."

Evil is real. Sin is real. Satan is real.

Jesus never pretends otherwise.

But then something surprising happens.

The servants immediately want to fix the problem.

"Do you want us to pull up the weeds?"

The Master says:

"No, because in pulling up the weeds you may uproot the wheat along with them. Let them grow together until harvest."

And that response may leave us uncomfortable because, if we're honest, most of us prefer immediate solutions.

We want God to act now. We want problems solved today. We want difficult people changed tomorrow.

Yet Jesus reminds us that God's timetable is often different from ours.

And perhaps nowhere is that lesson clearer than in the following story.

Several years ago, a man inherited his father's ranch.

His father had lovingly cared for the property for decades, planting trees, flowers, and native plants throughout the land.

The son wanted to honor his father's memory, so he took over caring for the property himself.

One spring he noticed patches of scraggly plants scattered throughout the fields. They looked ugly and out of place.

Determined to clean everything up, he spent an entire weekend pulling them out.

A few months later an elderly neighbor stopped by.

"How's the ranch doing?" he asked.

Proudly, the son replied, "I finally got rid of all those weeds Dad left behind."

The old neighbor's face fell.

"Son," he said quietly, "those weren't weeds. Your father planted those wildflowers years ago. They bloom late in the summer."

The son had removed some of the most beautiful flowers on the ranch because he judged too quickly.

My brothers and sisters, isn't that often true in our own lives?

How often do we look at people—or even ourselves—and assume that God has finished His work?

How often do we write people off?

The rebellious teenager.

The struggling spouse.

The person battling addiction.

The family member who has drifted away from the Church.

The person who hurt us years ago.

The truth is that God sees what we cannot see.

We see the present.

God sees the future.

We see weakness.

God sees possibility.

We see failure.

God sees redemption.

Think of St. Augustine. For years he lived far from God. Many probably thought he was hopeless.

But through the persistent prayers of his mother, St. Monica, God's grace transformed him into one of the greatest saints in the history of the Church.

God specializes in late bloomers.

But before we become too focused on the weeds in other people's lives, today's Gospel gently invites us to look inward.

Because the field Jesus describes is not only the world.

It is also our own hearts.

If we are honest, each one of us is both wheat and weeds.

There is goodness within us because we are created in God's image.

But there are weeds too.

Pride.

Resentment.

Fear.

Impatience.

Anger.

Jealousy.

Old wounds.

Unforgiveness.

Perhaps some of us came to Mass today discouraged because we continue struggling with the same weaknesses.

We may wonder:

"Lord, why haven't You taken this away?"

Perhaps because God is less interested in quick fixes and more interested in transformation.

God is patient.

He works slowly.

He shapes saints over years, sometimes decades.

And that patience of God is especially important for many men to hear today.

Men, fathers, grandfathers, husbands—many of you carry burdens silently.

You may look back over your life and think:

"I should have been a better husband."

"I wish I had spent more time with my children."

"I've made too many mistakes."

Today's Gospel offers hope.

God has not given up on you.

As long as you are breathing, God is still cultivating your heart.

The enemy whispers:

"You're finished."

Jesus says:

"I'm not finished with you yet."

 

And many women carry a different, but equally heavy burden.

Mothers, grandmothers, wives, daughters—you often carry families in prayer.

Many of you pray every day for children who no longer practice the faith, for struggling marriages, or for loved ones who seem far from God.

Do not lose heart.

Remember St. Monica.

For seventeen years she prayed and wept for Augustine.

God heard every prayer.

Keep praying.

Keep loving.

Keep trusting.

God is still working beneath the surface.

 

And that brings us beautifully to the next two parables Jesus gives us.

Because after speaking about patience, Jesus now speaks about growth.

Jesus tells us that the Kingdom of Heaven is like a mustard seed—the smallest of seeds that eventually becomes a great tree.

He says it is also like yeast, hidden in flour, quietly transforming everything from within.

In other words, God's work is often hidden.

Most spiritual growth happens quietly.

A daily Rosary.

A visit to the Blessed Sacrament.

A sincere confession.

A father blessing his children before bed.

A grandmother teaching her grandchildren to pray.

A simple act of kindness.

Small acts of faith, repeated over time, change lives.

The saints changed the world not through spectacular moments, but through daily fidelity.

 

So where does all of this leave us?

It leaves us with a choice.

Will we trust the Divine Farmer?

Will we trust that God is still at work—even in situations that seem hopeless?

My brothers and sisters, today's Gospel teaches us three important truths:

First, evil is real, but God remains in control.

Second, God is patient with us and asks us to be patient with others.

And third, even the smallest act of faith can bear extraordinary fruit.

This week, instead of focusing on the weeds in others, let us invite Jesus to tend the soil of our own hearts.

And let us remember:

The Divine Farmer never abandons His field.

He is still working.

He is still planting.

He is still healing.

And He is certainly not finished yet…with any of us.

Wednesday, July 8, 2026

The Soil of the Soul - Homily for the 15th Sunday of Ordinary Time Year A

 

Homily – Matthew 13:1–23

The Soil of the Soul

Presentation of the Blessed Virgin Mary Parish
Deacon Pat Kearns

Have you ever noticed that Jesus often taught His greatest lessons by talking about the ordinary things of life? Fishing nets… sheep… vineyards… coins… bread.

Why?

Because He wanted people to discover that God is not found only in extraordinary moments. God is speaking to us through the ordinary moments of every day.

Today's Gospel is one of those moments.

Jesus sits in a boat just offshore while a crowd gathers on the beach. Looking out over the fields, He points to a farmer scattering seed and says, in effect, "If you really want to understand the Kingdom of God, watch that farmer."

At first, it sounds like a lesson about agriculture.

But by the end, we realize it is really a lesson about our hearts.

Let me tell you a story.

Several years ago, a man decided he wanted the nicest lawn in his neighborhood.

He bought the highest-quality grass seed available. He spread it carefully. Watered it every day. Waited patiently.

A few weeks later, parts of his lawn were green.

Other parts were nothing but dirt.

Still others were covered in weeds.

Frustrated, he called an experienced landscaper.

"I bought the best seed," he complained. "Why didn't it grow?"

The landscaper smiled and said,

"The problem wasn't the seed.

The problem was the soil."

The ground had never been prepared.

There were rocks underneath.

The soil was compacted.

Old weeds were still alive beneath the surface.

The seed was perfect.

The soil wasn't ready.

And that's exactly where Jesus wants to take us today.

Because His Word is always perfect.

If it isn't bearing fruit in our lives, the question isn't about the seed.

It's about the condition of our hearts.

So let's look at the four kinds of soil Jesus describes and ask ourselves a simple question: Which one sounds most like me?

1st - The Hard Path

Jesus begins with the seed that falls along the path.

The ground is so hard that the seed cannot even enter.

Birds quickly come and carry it away.

Have you ever noticed how a walking trail becomes harder every year?

Thousands of footsteps eventually create ground where nothing grows.

The same thing can happen spiritually.

Life can harden us.

Disappointments.

Broken relationships.

Loss.

Stress.

Years of routine.

Even the constant noise of our culture.

Slowly our hearts become less receptive.

We still come to Mass.

We still hear Scripture.

We still pray the responses.

But nothing sinks in anymore.

Not because God stopped speaking...

But because we've stopped listening.

The evil one doesn't even have to steal the seed.

It never entered the heart in the first place.

But thankfully, Jesus doesn't stop there.

He knows some hearts aren't hard...

They're simply shallow.

2nd - The Rocky Soil

Jesus now describes rocky ground.

The seed sprouts immediately.

Everything looks wonderful.

Until the sun comes out.

Then it withers.

How many of us have experienced that?

We attend a retreat.

We make a great confession.

We leave inspired.

We promise God we'll never be the same.

Then Monday morning arrives.

Traffic.

Bills.

Difficult coworkers.

Family struggles.

Health concerns.

And suddenly our enthusiasm begins to fade.

Faith built only on emotion rarely survives hardship.

Real faith grows roots.

Roots grow during quiet prayer.

During daily Mass.

During ordinary mornings.

During perseverance.

During choosing Christ when nobody notices.

Those hidden moments are where saints are formed.

And yet Jesus tells us there is another danger—one that may be even more common today.

3rd - The Thorny Soil

The third soil actually receives the seed.

It begins growing.

But something else grows with it.

The thorns.

Notice what Jesus says.

He doesn't mention terrible sins.

He mentions worries.

Anxiety.

The pursuit of wealth.

The distractions of life.

That's striking.

Because most Christians don't lose their faith overnight.

It simply gets crowded out.

Work becomes busier.

Schedules become fuller.

Phones become louder.

Televisions stay on.

Social media demands attention.

The calendar fills.

Prayer disappears.

Before long, Christ isn't rejected.

He's just squeezed out.

Perhaps Satan's greatest weapon today isn't persecution.

It's distraction.

If he can keep us busy enough...

He can keep us spiritually hungry without us even realizing it.

Which brings us to the final soil... and thankfully, it's the one God desires for every one of us.

4th - The Good Soil

Jesus finally speaks of good soil.

Here's something farmers understand.

Good soil isn't naturally perfect.

It becomes good because someone worked it.

It was broken.

Turned over.

The rocks were removed.

The weeds were pulled.

It was cultivated.

Isn't that exactly what God does in our lives?

Sometimes suffering softens us.

Sometimes failure humbles us.

Sometimes illness reminds us we need Him.

Confession removes the weeds.

Prayer softens the ground.

The Eucharist nourishes the roots.

Little by little...

Our hearts become fertile ground.

Then something beautiful happens.

The same seed that produced nothing in one heart...

Produces thirty...

Sixty...

Even one hundredfold...

In another.

That's what grace can do.

 

Let me now share a Story About Growth

I love something farmers often say.

"You can't make a seed grow."

You can water it.

Protect it.

Cultivate the soil.

But growth happens quietly.

Almost invisibly.

That's exactly how holiness works.

Most saints didn't become saints in one dramatic moment.

They became saints through thousands of ordinary acts of faithfulness.

One prayer.

One Rosary.

One act of forgiveness.

One Holy Communion.

One visit to someone who was lonely.

One sacrifice.

One act of generosity.

Again...

And again...

And again.

Until one day people looked at them and said,

"There's something different about that person."

That difference was Christ.

Growing quietly inside them.

 

So, what does Jesus want us to do this week?

Not become perfect.

Simply become more receptive.

Maybe He wants to soften one hard place in your heart.

Maybe He wants to remove one rock you've been carrying for years.

Maybe He wants you to pull one thorn from your life.

Maybe that thorn is resentment.

Maybe it's fear.

Maybe it's constant busyness.

Maybe it's spending more time scrolling than praying.

Don't try to change everything this week.

Just let God change one thing.

Because one stone removed...

Makes room for deeper roots.

One weed removed...

Lets in more light.

One act of surrender...

Can change a life.

 

My brothers and sisters,

Every Sunday, the Divine Sower walks into this church.

Again today...

He scatters His Word generously.

The seed is perfect.

The Sower is faithful.

The harvest is possible.

The only question remaining is this:

What kind of soil will I be today?

As we come forward in just a few moments to receive Jesus in the Holy Eucharist, let us ask Him to do what only He can do.

Break up the hardened places.

Remove the hidden rocks.

Pull away the choking weeds.

Fill our hearts with the richness of His grace.

So that His Word may bear fruit...

Thirty...

Sixty...

Even one hundredfold...

For His glory...

For His Church...

And for the salvation of the world.

Amen.