15th Sunday in Ordinary Time A2
12 July 2026
St. Ann Catholic Church - Prairie Village, KS
AMDG
Have I let myself becoming boring?
This is always the question I ask myself when hearing the parable of the sower. Parables are exciting. Mysteries are confounding. The ways of God are surprising. There is no adventure that compares to growing in the likeness of God, being driven with great compunction by the Holy Spirit that wants to dwell richly in you, and to participate with all your heart in the redemption mission of the Lord, the ultimate victory of life over death.
It's scary exciting. That's why I shy away from it. There are many things more comfortable, and less scary than the pursuit of holiness. There are many things cheaper and easier. There's nothing better.
Jesus speaks in parables because He wants those who think they get it to not get it, and those who think they don't get it to get it. The mysteries of God are inexhaustible. They cut to the heart, revealing the presence of God and the real meaning of life. They are no surface level, but for those who want to go deep so they can go high in the great adventure of glorifying God.
The only way to grow rich in these mysteries is to study and pray and worship. Those who do these things will grow rich. Those who don't will have stolen what they only superficially possess.
The whole point of life is to approach the mystery of God with childlike awe. It's to realize that you could just be dust, but through the Spirit of God breathing and nourishing the life of God in you, you are not a mere mortal. You are meant to pursue the glory of God.
It's to recognize the Word of God as Jesus Himself, who planted Himself in the ground in humiliating love, to reveal the ultimate source of life, a life that He nourishes not only in word but in sacrament, nourishing your two-fold unity as soul and body!
Parables are mysteries, showing when we have traded the glory of God for boring things that can bring life, be it our complicity with sin, or our fear of anything deeper than the superficiality of our temptations and distractions.
We're not supposed to get them. If we think we do, we are boring. If we don't, the great adventure which is God Himself lies open before us!
+mj