st. Henry II.
Henricus II.
July 13, non-binding monument |
|
Position: |
emperor |
Deaths: |
1024 |
Patron: |
Bamberg and its archbishopric and Basel with its bishopric |
Attributes: |
imperial crown, church, sword |
July 13, non-binding monument |
|
Position: |
emperor |
Deaths: |
1024 |
Patron: |
Bamberg and its archbishopric and Basel with its bishopric |
Attributes: |
imperial crown, church, sword |
“The sower went out to sow” (Mt 13, 3). One of the most famous parables of Jesus Christ begins with these words. We know perfectly well that the sower of the gospel is God himself, who sows the seed of his sanctifying grace in the fields of human hearts. Every grain of God is valuable and life-giving. There is no chaff or low-value grain. God constantly goes out to the flower bed of human hearts with the sowing of his word, which leads to the knowledge of God’s love and the achievement of eternal salvation: “For the word of God is living, effective, and sharper than any two-edged sword; it penetrates to the separation of the soul from the spirit and the joints from the marrow and judges the thoughts and intentions of the heart” (Hebrews 4, 12). Today, the seed of God’s word is sown on the field of the Church of Christ by priests when they fulfill their teaching mission. God’s Word is still up-to-date, alive and indicates what we should do in order to achieve eternal salvation and live in love and harmony here on earth.
The heart of each of us is God’s horn, on which the sowing of God’s word constantly falls. The Lord, on his part, is doing everything possible to make it bear a rich harvest. And there will come a day in the life of each of us when we will have to account for the harvest of the sowing of God’s love. John the Baptist predicts it: “He has a winnowing winch in his hand to clear the threshing floor and gather the wheat into his barn, but he will burn the chaff in unquenchable fire” (Luke 3:17). Accepting the teachings of the Lord Jesus in life leads to the achievement of life fulfillment and eternal salvation. Waste of this priceless gift will result in eternal damnation. And none of us will then be able to say that we didn’t have a chance, an opportunity, or a way to get to know Christ, His holy Gospel, and to live according to it.
But as Jesus himself predicted in today’s Gospel, God’s sowing brings a different harvest. May there be a hundredfold, sixtyfold, or thirtyfold harvest as much as possible. But the Savior, knowing human nature, foresaw that, unfortunately, there would always be people who would waste the gift of God’s grace. For some, the reason for this will be looking at the things of this world; for others, a lack of perseverance and readiness to make sacrifices. Still others will trivialize God’s love as they choose convenient selfishness. But we must not forget one more factor that affects crop yield. This is the other person who can help or greatly hinder himself.
Even the most fertile soil needs tilling to produce a harvest. Even the best grain, sown in uncultivated black soil, has little chance of sprouting and growing. It is the same with the human heart. Each of us present here owes our faith experienced and realized in our everyday lives to the people who brought us to Jesus and helped us grow in faith. Without their direct involvement, efforts as well as personal testimony of a life of faith in Christ Crucified and Risen, we would not be here in the sanctuary today. It was our parents and grandparents who taught us about God and faith and, above all, showed by their example that faith is not folklore or tradition or an addition to everyday life, but a value that guides our daily behavior. We owe our faith to our catechists, priests who prepared us for the reception of individual sacraments and who preached God’s word to us for years. We enrich and develop our faith with content drawn from the press, Catholic books, and Catholic media. Without all those people, we would not be here today, and the grain of God’s grace could not bring the Lord’s desired harvest in our hearts. So when we owe our faith to another person to a great extent, let us try to help so that the lives of other people also bear the fruit of faith and holiness.
When we travel to the Holy Land, we stop in the Judean Desert, in the places where Jesus fasted for 40 days. We see all sorts of things on the ground after heavy rains. The land of the Judean Desert is very fertile. But there is no water. Even the best grain sown on that parched land has no chance of bearing a harvest. Similarly, you sow grain on a beaten dirt road, which may even be the most fertile soil, but not at all ready for sowing. In other places, we see what is happening to the fallow fields, which formerly produced a great harvest but, deprived of the hands of the harvester, have become overgrown with weeds that are difficult to pull up. If each of these lands were cultivated responsibly and the harvester took care of it, it would yield multiple harvests. The quality of the soil is very important, no less important than the quality of the grain. But the work of those who work the land cannot be overestimated.
Once the artist Dante Gabriel Rossetti was stopped by an elderly man who had painted several paintings and wanted Dante to appreciate them, as well as give an opinion on the talent of the author of those paintings. Rossetti looked at them carefully. After the first few, the artist realized the paintings were worthless and that their author lacked talent. Dante, being a delicate person, did not want to hurt the elderly person, so he respectfully said that the paintings were not of much value, but their author had some talent. He was uncomfortable, but he couldn’t fool him. The assessment also froze the older man, but it looked like he expected it. Then, apologizing to Rossetti for taking up his time, he asked if the artist could paint the young student. Dante looked at them, brightened considerably, and enthusiastically said, “These are good. The young man has great talent. He must be given every help to develop his talent. He has a great future if he works hard and persevering”. Rossetti saw the great excitement of the older man and asked, “Who is that young, talented artist? Your son?” “No – replied the older man sadly. That’s me from 40 years ago. If I had heard that praise then, I wouldn’t have wasted my talent, I wouldn’t have given up so easily”.
God sows the grain of his grace, but if I trample it in the heart of my neighbor, when I am a source of doubt about the meaning of faith for him, then there will be no harvest. If my presence in the sanctuary as a confession of faith in Jesus Christ has no reflection in everyday life, then what attitude do I teach others? I saw an eloquent film on social media: “I salute all the Catholics who go to Holy Mass every Sunday and lie at work.” Did our parents and catechists teach us such a faith? Does God’s word preached by priests prepare us for such behavior? Would it be possible to encourage anyone to get to know Jesus more closely and live the faith in the Catholic Church with such behavior?
The effectiveness of the grain of God’s grace sown in another person’s soul depends on each of our testimonies. Jesus says: “He who has received much, much will be required of him, and to whom they have entrusted much, of him they will require more” (Lk 12, 48). The most depends on how the priests implement in their lives the doctrine they preach from the pulpit in the church. The greatest responsibility rests on them, for in their hands God places the deposit of faith. But none of us is exempt from the obligation to bear witness to our faith, which will help all those who, for various reasons, are far from Christ. The angry ground can be plowed through the grace of prayer, conversation, and the witness of one’s own faith. Weeds of sins can be pulled out when we show the joy of living in friendship with God and our neighbors. We will not water the scorched soil of our neighbor’s heart with anything other than our understanding and kindness. The harvest of our faith is the joint fruit of the grace of the grain of God’s word, the help and testimony of those who brought us to Jesus, and our own efforts. Out of gratitude for the gift and fruit of our own faith, let us strive to help others so that they may bring forth the harvest of eternal life that day. Amen
10 July, commemoration |
|
Position: |
King and Martyr |
Deaths: |
1086 |
Patron: |
Denmark |
Attributes: |
dagger, spear, royal badges, arrow |
9 July, commemoration |
|
Position: |
Martyrs |
Deaths: |
1648-1930 |
July 8, reminder |
|
Position: |
missionary bishop and martyr |
Death: |
7th century BC. |
Patron: |
Franks, Diocese of Würzburg; plasterers and coopers; invoked against eye diseases, gout and rheumatism |
Attributes: |
bishop, dagger, sword, palm tree |
July 7, reminder |
|
Position: |
Bishop OSB |
Death: |
787 |
Patron: |
diocese of Eichstätt; lattice manufacturers |
Attributes: |
bishop with a crosier and possibly a book, inscription Spes, Fides, Charitas; rationale (i.e. part of the garment on the shoulders), arrows |
Maria Goretti
| July 6, a non-binding commemoration | |
| Death: | 1902 |
| Patron: | children and youth |
Attributes: |
lilies, sometimes 14, palm tree; rosary |
If Christ had led only this veto of today’s evanjelio, he would certainly have learned today. Which of us doesn’t bother and feel overwhelmed? And who wouldn’t want to get divine reinforcement in a moment of exhaustion? But Kristov’s words don’t end here. The Lord continues and talks about the bremen and jarme, which he wants for us, which he doesn’t have to worry about anymore. How can it be pleasant even in some spring? And how could we even rest in it?
Nie is a bremen as well as a bremen. We know it, for example, in sports. You can run in the morning, you will return completely exhausted and.. you are ready to start a nice day. It is written similarly in one psalm: „Stupajú a sil im still pribuda.“ And now the duke follows this unusual phenomenon: lebo „na Sione uvidia Boha najvyššie.“
Every matter is enlightened by the number he watches. We cannot fully understand the actions of some person whom we do not know what he is thinking about. We don’t even know the deep truth about life, we don’t understand a pokial. So what is the key of our life? Bliss. God’s vision. However, the environment for its achievement is also an issue. The catechism talks about it: „ So that the believers in Christ can possess and see God, um ⁇ they create their lusts and with God the mercifulness of the viťazio over the seductions of pleasure and power.“
The Christian life can privilege us to this noble ciel (videnium and the possession of Boha), because it presupposes a seed of glory in us. A grain cannot become an oak tree, a pokialion is a wood of an equal species and does not have an essentially equal life or an adult tree. Diet could not become a mature person, because he no longer has human naturalness, hoci and only in „unfinished“ status. Equally, a Christian could not become one of the blessed in heaven, a pokiah would not have received divine life before.
If he wants to understand the essence of the seed thoroughly, he must necessarily examine his life in the state of the mature tree. If we want to understand the essence of the life of grace in us, we must perceive it as an embryonic form of eternal life. Ide in principle for an equal divine life with two divisions. Here on earth we can know God even vaguely through the environment of the viera and not in the prima mite of the light of the nazerania. Due to the greater volatility of our free-spirited will, we can lose our supernatural life, which is no longer possible in heaven.
Similar to our physical ( sports ) practice, the Lord’s spring is difficult in its claims, but in its effects Christ’s bremen are human, because they change our hearts. We see it in the life of people who thought it seriously with God and became holy. By God’s kindness and by carrying his bremen. Leave this knowledge to us as a rest and reinforcement.