AD SENSE

16th Sunday A - Liturgy

  Greeting

The patience of God our Father, the love of our Lord Jesus Christ and the strength of the Holy Spirit be always with you. R/ And also with you.

Introduction by the Celebrant

1.   There Must Be Time to Heal

We all wish to see a world without evil, a Church without faults. To see that the real Church and the real world are not sinless and not perfect makes us impatient. Jesus reminds us today: be patient, for God is patient with the Church, with the world, and with us. Let’s not forget this. He gives us the time to change. Let us ask Jesus in this Eucharist that we may begin the change of the world and of the Church with the change of ourselves.

2.   Patience with the Weeds

You feel happily surprised when, after a mistake or an offence on your part, the person you have hurt is patient with you and gives you new chances. That is God’s way with us. He keeps believing in us. That is also the way God wants us to treat one another. Like him, we should be fully aware that people are neither entirely good nor completely bad, and that, therefore, we should be patient, forgiving, trusting, and give time to heal. Let us thank our Lord for his patience and ask him to make us a bit like himself.

Penitential Act

We now ask the Lord to forgive us that we have not used the chances he gave us to be and to do better. (pause)

-Lord Jesus, give us the courage to change what can be changed. Lord, have mercy. R/ Lord, have mercy.

-Jesus Christ, give us the patience to accept what cannot yet be changed. Christ, have mercy. R/ Christ, have mercy.

-Lord Jesus, give us the wisdom of your own kind patience. Lord, have mercy. R/ Lord, have mercy.

Have mercy on us, Lord, and forgive us the evil we have done. Make us patient with ourselves and others and lead us to everlasting life. R/ Amen.

Opening Prayer

Let us pray to our loving God who is patient and full of compassion (pause)

Merciful and patient God, You let your sun rise on both bad and good and let the rain fall on the just and the wicked alike. Thank you for your patience and your confidence. Change our hearts, Give us the time to grow and mature as disciples of Jesus, your Son, and dispose us to accept everyone with your own untiring love and trust. Make this the way your kingdom grows among us. We ask this through Christ our Lord. R/ Amen.

First Reading: Wisdom 12:13, 16-19

God is Patient: God’s power does not crush or oppress, not even the sinner. He shows his strength by his patience and mercy. As he gives us time to change and be converted, we must be tolerant with one another.

Second Reading: Romans 8:26-27

The Holy Spirit Helps Us in Our Weakness: Our Christian living is imperfect, but God knows what is in our hearts; he will give us the Holy Spirit to pray in us and give us strength and hope.

Gospel; Matthew 13:24-43

Leave It to God to Separate the Good from the Bad: The parable of the wheat and the weeds illustrates God is patience with an imperfect Church and weak people. Not all in the Church are seeking God’s kingdom. But God gives us the opportunity to be converted and to grow.

Prayers of the Faithful

We do not know how to pray properly. Let the Holy Spirit express our plea for the good of the Church and of everyone. Let us say: R/Lord, keep us in your love.

–   We do not know how to be patient properly. That the Holy Spirit keep us from judging harshly people who have done wrong, even those who have hurt us, let us pray: R/ Lord, keep us in your love.

–   We do not know how to forgive properly. That the Holy Spirit may give us the strength to take the first step in seeking reconciliation, let us pray: R/ Lord, keep us in your love.

–   We do not know how to hope properly. May the Holy Spirit fill us with confidence in the future of the Church and of our country, let us pray: R/ Lord, keep us in your love.

–   We do not know how to bring justice properly. Let the Holy Spirit make us aware of the rights of people and dispose us to give all their due and more, let us pray: R/ Lord, keep us in your love.

–   We do not know how to love properly. That the Holy Spirit give to our communities a sense of unity, acceptance and belonging, let us pray: R/ Lord, keep us in your love.

Father, let your Holy Spirit prepare us in joy for the day when you will harvest the seeds you have sown among us, through Jesus Christ our Lord. R/ Amen.

Prayer over the Gifts

Lord our God, merciful Father, Your Son Jesus Christ invites you to his table the weak with the strong, the proud with the humble. By encountering him, May the weak become stronger and the good better, and may all of us become mild, forgiving and tolerant with each other, As you have been patient with us through Jesus Christ our Lord. R/ Amen.

Introduction to the Eucharistic Prayer

Through Jesus and with him, we offer this Eucharist to our patient and loving Father, and we thank him for his mercy.

Introduction to the Lord’s Prayer

We do not know how to pray as we should, but the Holy Spirit helps us to pray well to our Father in heaven in the words of Jesus himself. R/ Our Father...

Deliver Us

Deliver us, Lord, from every evil, most of all from sin, the greatest of all evils. Keep us free from judging and condemning, for who are we to pass judgment on others since we ourselves have to ask you to be patient and lenient with us. Help us to accept and appreciate each other and to prepare together in joy and hope the full coming among us of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. R/ For the kingdom...

Invitation to Communion

This is Jesus the Lord, who sows in our hearts the good seed of his message. Happy are we to listen to him and to receive him as our bread of life.

R/ Lord, I am not worthy...

Prayer after Communion

Lord our God, you reveal your strength by being lenient with the weak. We have received your Son Jesus Christin this Eucharistic celebration. Fill us with the power of his Spirit, that we may encourage rather than condemn, be constructive rather than hostile, accept one another rather than reject, work together rather than criticise. In this way, may we become more your people among whom Jesus lives, our Lord forever and ever. R/ Amen.

Blessing

For people who easily classify others more according their bad traits than their qualities, it is good that we have been here with the Lord. He is patient with us, forgiving sees the good in us and gives us the time to heal. From him, we learn to be patient with others. So let us practice patience, with the blessing of almighty God, the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit. R/ Amen.

Go in peace and be patient

with one another. R/ Thanks be to God.

REFLECTIONS 

Matthew 13: 24-43; Be calm, God is in control

Jesus describes the Kingdom of God through three parables in today’s Gospel reading. We will focus today on the first story: that of the good wheat and the weeds, which illustrates the problem of evil in the world and highlights God’s patience. A field is the setting for the narrative. The Master of the field represents God, and he sows good seed, while the enemy represents Satan, and he scatters weeds.

Matthew addressed his letter to Jewish converts who became Christians. The Gospel was composed fifty years after Jesus’ death and resurrection. The world around them displayed signs of evil, growing and flourishing as they observed it. How come Jesus’ Kingdom has not been fully and immediately successful?

It is necessary to explain why evil exists. The evangelist explains it with a parable of Jesus. Only good seed is sown by the Master of the field. The evangelist specifies that the seed is of good quality. Every action of the Master is “good”! In Genesis 1, the refrain is repeated ten times: “And God saw that it was good.” Everything that God has done has been good.

Secondly, we have the enemy. He represents the logic of this world, an anti-evangelical mentality. At night, when everyone is sleeping, he sows the kind of weed that looks like grains. It is impossible to eradicate it without destroying the wheat because its roots are intertwined with those of the wheat.

Mathew wants to tell his community that when our vigilance drops and when we lose focus into dissipation, the devil finds a way into the field of our hearts to infest them with the logic of the world. It takes only an oversight for one to adapt to the world’s morality. Often, we do not even differentiate between the values of Kingdom and those of the world, because they look very much alike. By the time one realises the presence of the weed, it must have already become an inseparable part of one’s life.

The servants approach the Master, suggesting they should weed out the ground, but the Master knows that is suicidal. He keeps his calm and tells the servants not to panic. The Gospel is a gentle reminder that God is still in control.

When the harvest time comes, “all scandals and agents of iniquity” will be gathered and thrown into the fiery furnace. It’s not a threat of punishment but a good announcement of the fire of God - the fire of God refers to the Holy Spirit - and His Fire will purify us.