Today’s readings, Jeremiah 14: 17-22 and Matthew 13: 36-43,
are awesome! Jeremiah cries out to the Lord, distraught over the destruction he
sees in his country: people are being killed, left to rot in the fields. People
are starving in the cities. Wherever he
looks he sees the effects of evil. Sounds like Jeremiah is living in 2016:
every day, on the news, we hear of individuals being gunned down, stabbed, beaten (whether that be physical,
verbal, or emotional). Every day children are abandoned, neglected, abused, sold into slavery, become victims of the sex industry or drug
traffickers. Every day babies are killed in their mother’s womb. On and on and
on we see evil, that is, we witness
people ensnared by Satan’s deceptive maneuvers, lured into becoming wealthy by any means or avoiding inconvenience or sacrifices that are part of life here on earth.
Like Jeremiah, we could ask God: “Have you cast Judah (us)
off completely? Is Zion (insert the name of your city, country, State)
loathsome to you? Why have you struck us a blow that can not [it seems] be
healed? We wait for peace, to no avail; for a time of healing, but terror comes
instead. We recognize, O Lord, our
wickedness,” or do we?
And God says to us, through Matthew 13: 28-30,
Do not pull out the weeds, those doing evil in the world, because “when you weed out the darnel you
might pull up the wheat with it. Let them both grow til the harvest; and at harvest
time, I shall say to the reapers: ‘First
collect the darnel and tie it in bundles to be burnt, then gather the wheat
into my barn.’” In Matthew 13: 41-43,
Jesus says to us that at the end of the ages: “The Son of man will send his angels and they
will gather out of his kingdom all causes of falling and all who do evil, and
throw them into the blazing furnace, where there will be weeping and grinding
of teeth. Then the upright will shine like the sun in the kingdom of their
Father.’ Anyone who has ears should listen!”
Are we listening? And, what am I doing to bring about
healing: to decrease wickedness, to lessen violence (verbal, physical,
emotional, spiritual) in my relationships, to bring about peace in the world, that
is, in the family, in my religious community, in the parish, in the municipal
or civic community in which I live?
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