THE WHEAT AND THE WEEDS
There used
to be a cartoon in The Herald featuring a delightful rogue called Andy
Capp. One day he eyes a smartly dressed young lady and the local vicar happens
to be passing and notices. He feels bound to remonstrate but before he can open
his mouth, Andy says, “I know, Vicar, there’s so much good in the worst of us,
an’ so much bad in the best of us, it is difficult to tell which of us ought to
reform the rest of us, Eh?”
Jesus’
story of the wheat and the weeds makes the same point: ‘do not remove the weed
now in case you pull up the wheat at the same time. Let them grow till the
harvest; then the reapers will separate the good from the bad.’ We live a mixed
reality. We would love everyone to obey traffic rules but they don’t: they cut
in ahead of you, they over take on the left, etc. Louis Armstrong wrote a song
‘Oh! What a wonderful world.’ Well, it is not that wonderful. It is very messy.
We find it
in ourselves. We have many gifts and do well. But we are aware of our darker
side: our selfishness, our avoidance of challenge, our judgement of others, etc.
In this we are no different from famous people – even saints. In a recent short
study of St John Henry Newman, Eamon Duffy, the Cambridge historian wrote;
‘Newman strove all his life for holiness but he had more than his share of
human frailties. He could be tyrannical in friendship, he was thin-skinned and
easily offended, slow to forgive, even at time implacable.’
It has been
said that we have the ‘weaknesses of our strengths’. I used to work under the
leadership of a Jesuit who had been a British officer in India during the war.
He was a strong leader in the sense that he was focused on getting the job
done. But he could trample on many toes in the process; leaving people angry,
frustrated and with a feeling of being used.
In
conclusion, we can say the wheat needs the weeds! In some mysterious way,
opposition – even from within ourselves – brings out the best in us. Our
journey to holiness calls us to make friends – not enemies – of our spontaneous
negative reactions.
Christian
asceticism today is no longer about flagellating ourselves but in integrating
our passions into our personality in a way that reflects the values of the
Beatitudes. Yesterday, we celebrated St Mary Magdalene. She was a shining
example of this. It can be even harder to do than carrying out the exterior
penances we were encouraged to practice in an earlier age.
23 July 2023 Sunday
16 A
Wis 12:13-19 Rom 8:26-27 Mt
13:24-30
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