Showing posts with label Kingdom of God. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kingdom of God. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 27, 2016

The Kingdom of God

        In the selections from the Gospel of Matthew that we are reading at Eucharist, Jesus proposes parables about the Kingdom of God for the crowds from the local experiences that they understand.          “To what shall we compare the Kingdom of God? He says,
       “The Kingdom of God may be likened to a man who sowed seed."
       "The Kingdom of God is like a mustard seed that a person took and sowed…”
       “The Kingdom of God is like yeast that a woman took and mixed…”
         Jesus’ examples of how to understand the Kingdom of God stirred my imagination to look around me to see what local experiences could be compared to the Kingdom of God present in our midst.  I came up with two:
       The Kingdom of God is like the cucumber vines in our monastery garden which are daily producing such an abundance of cucumbers. They are multiplying so fast that we can hardly keep up with gathering them, cooking them, slicing them, pickling them, canning them, and storing them for consumption throughout the rest of the year. We love our bread and butter pickles.The cucumber vines have become a community building event.
       While sitting at the front desk doing my portress' duty the last few weeks, I have been watching many young people biking up to our front walk, or driving up and parking for a short time, getting out and working on their smart phones and iPads till they get a Pokémon-Go signal and capture a character, give a smile of success, and then off they go to the next site.
       The Kingdom of God is like the Pokémon-Go game that is energizing our young people to go out to designated sites, capture a character, and move on to search for more. Our front gate, the Monastery front entrance, and the lake by the infirmary are three of these designated spots. I believe more folks have located and identified St. Walburg Monastery building through this game than anything else. Let us hope that this game will continue to stimulate good sharing among friends and families locally and all over the world, and keep them searching for all the wonderful gifts and surprises God has in store for them.
       In the Give Us This Day July issue, Fr. Ronald Witherup, reflects on the Parables of Matthew:  “As you hear each parable, you might ask yourself:  what does it tell me about God and God’s priorities?  Not every parable has a moral about our life.Sometimes they tell us that God’s Kingdom grows secretly and mysteriously (like the mustard seed or the yeast), or that it contains every kind of person (the net) whom only God will judge when the kingdom finally comes.Jesus’ main advice:  If you have ears, then listen.”                                                                        

       To what can you compare the Kingdom of God around you?  
            Sr. Mary Tewes, OSB,

Wednesday, July 16, 2014

The Wheat and the Weeds

       This summer, the members at St. Joseph’s House, where I live, planted a vegetable garden.  We pull
up the weeds from the vegetable plants right away.  It is uncanny how much a weed will look like the plant they are growing next to in the garden.  I think the weeds, (evil) deceives us as good.
       Sunday’s Gospel for July 20 is taken from Matthew, Chapter 13, and talks about the Kingdom of God. Jesus speaks a lot about the Kingdom of God in the Gospels.  In the Gospel, the householder lets the
wheat and the weeds grow together until harvest.In thinking about the Kingdom of God and this Gospel, I believe that the Kingdom of God begins here on earth and how we choose to live and grow
in God’s grace is preparation for the Eternal Kingdom. We too, can be deceived by evil and we need to discern the wheat from the weeds.
       After hoeing the garden, a few days ago, I looked out our window and saw a robin coming to sit on the fence to look for his breakfast. The soil was favorable.  God is Good!
      Sr. Barbara Woeste, OSB