
Does mankind know how a seed grows? Yes, scientifically, we get it. Any kid who’s tucked a seed down into dirt in a paper cup in time for a Mother’s Day marigold or put a bean seed on a damp paper towel and then tucked it in a zippered storage bag can talk about how that seed grows. That kid watches what time, patience, and a daily spritz of water can do and one day, BOOM, the seed has burst, the first root has emerged, and a tiny delicate shoot rises toward the sun.
Scientists can explain the same process in detail with fancy words like germination, seed coat, endosperm, and embryo, but the story is the same. First it is a seed, and then it is a plant. So yes, we know. But do we really know?
How does it start? Why? What is that spark that puts the whole thing in motion? It is, of course, the Creator himself still creating with every tiny seed. Yes, intellectually we know that given the right conditions — healthy soil, adequate water, proper temperature, and sunlight — a seed will grow. But only in faith can we explain “how.”
In today’s Gospel, Jesus uses the parable of the sower and the seed to explain the Kingdom of God. It is like the tiny mustard seed, the smallest of all the seeds, “But once it is sown, it springs up and becomes the largest of plants and puts forth large branches, so that the birds of the sky can dwell in its shade.”
We have been given these humble seeds of faith. We cannot leave them sitting in a dark drawer or under an empty pot on the workbench. Instead, we are called, like the man in Jesus’ parable, to scatter the seeds, to lovingly plant them wherever we are. We plant the seeds of the Kingdom among those around us by living in His truth and His love. Then the God of all creation urges those tiny seeds to grow up into the greatest faith of all. We know not how, but we trust Him who does.
Daily Reading
Sixth Sunday in Ordinary Time
Reading I Jeremiah 17:5-8 Thus says the LORD: Cursed is the one who trusts in human beings, who seeks his strength in flesh, whose heart turns away from the LORD….
Saint of the Day
Saint Onesimus
Saint Onesimus, a first-century slave, converted by St. Paul, later became a bishop and martyr, epitomizing redemption and faith.
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