Today's Scripture readings use
the imagery of a vineyard to describe God’s love for us. The prophet Isaiah in the first Scripture
reading uses a love ballad to describe his friend’s song concerning his
vineyard. Then Isaiah says the house of
Israel is God’s vineyard.
Gospel parable the vineyard is the
reign of God that is to be found within us.
The vineyard of the Lord is to be found in our own hearts. God goes to great lengths to prepare wondrous
blessings for the vineyard. We are
nurtured by God’s Word, fed at God’s table, helped by the commandment of
love. All we need do is to let God tend
us and bring us to produce good fruit. We
are invited in this celebration of the Eucharist to invite Christ into the
vineyard of our own heart and to open our hearts and our minds to his loving
presence.
Further, in this mystery of the
Eucharistic celebration of inviting Christ into the vineyard of our hearts, the
grace of Christ’s presence in the vineyard leads us to celebrate that we are
made to love. We become our best selves
when we open ourselves to giving and receiving the love of others. The vineyard of the Lord is to be found
within us but this vineyard is connected to our brothers and sisters with
Christ as our cornerstone. This is the
mystery of the Church of Jesus. We are
better together. The whole Church is the
vineyard of the Lord.
What can go wrong with this beautiful
imagery of all of us together being the vineyard of the Lord? From the Gospel parable, the tenants to whom
the vineyard is entrusted got greedy and wanted everything for themselves. Plain and simple, there is rebellion in the
vineyard.
There is rebellion in the vineyard of
our own hearts when we get greedy and want everything for ourselves and are
unwilling to share. In the end, the
greed of the tenants becomes their undoing for the king will have no part with
them.
There is also rebellion in the
vineyard of the Lord in our world as well.
Most recently, the ruthlessness and complete disregard for the dignity
of life demonstrated by Stephen Paddock in his murderous rampage in Las
Vegas. We see rebellion when one nation
is at war with another nation.
Would that we would have the
spiritual sightedness to believe that everything is on loan to us from
God. We are temporay tenants. We don’t own anything, even though sometimes
we act as if we own it all. Everything
ultimately belongs to God.
We must also look within and ask whether
we at times are the tenant farmers who abuse the giftedness we have been
given? What is the produce that comes
from the vineyard of your own heart, and do we give it back gratefully to God
our landowner?
Our lives
are a vineyard that God entrusts to us.
Each of our lives, each of our vineyards, is richly blessed, The voice of God’s Son calls out to us to
share our talents, our riches, our giftedness with those around us and with
those who have less. May we be conscious
that like the tenant farmers in the Gospel, we are tempted to be greedy and
provide only for ourselves. When we
excuse ourselves from generous sharing and love of others, when we become more
interested in security rather than a Gospel commitment to sharing, we fail to
respond to the call of God In our lives.
The vineyard of our own heart is ripe for the harvest, and God calls out
to each one of us: “Come, share what you
have and discover that the real treasure is not what you possess but in what
you are willing to give away.”
Lord, we
thank you for the privilege of being tenants of your vineyard. We are called to be good stewards of all of
God’s creation. In his encyclical ON
CARE FOR OUR COMMON HOME, Pope Francis calls us to be good stewards of planet
earth having much reverence and care and stewardship of the earthly resources
that are given to us.
Bishop
Matano is calling to share what we have with those in need throughout our
diocese by supporting the CMA.
Our parish
is embarking upon a new inititiative CHRISTLIFE in inviting to have a deeper
relationship with Jesus.
Being
tenants of the vineyard of the Lord, being good stewards of the giftedness that
God has entrusted to us is a privilege, not a burden. My ministry as a priest
and your ministry in your family and your work life and your ministry within
the life of our parish is, please God, a privilege and not just an obligation.
What is the
take home message of today’s Scriptures?
We are tenants of this earth,
stewards of what has been entrusted to our care. We are stewards of the church, entrusted with the awesome task of ministering
to the needs of a broken and hurting world.
And, as the tenants of God’s earthly vineyard, we gather as the faith community of St Joseph’s Sunday after Sunday to celebrate Jesus’ victory over death, and to offer back to the owner of the vineyard a portion of what the land has yielded to us.
We offer up
the sweat and the tears and the laughter of our own lives, and as we do
that, we receive back from God the body
and blood of His Son who was crucified that we might be redeemed, You
know what? That’s a pretty good
deal for us. We are the recipients of
God’s unending love for us.
Have a
blessed day.
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