Friday, November 15, 2024

Homilies

Fr. Lawrence Jagdfeld, O.F.M.
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Something about Trees

Homily for Saturday of the Fifth Week in Ordinary Time

There is something about the woods that uniquely evokes an awareness of God’s creation. The trees’ canopy takes invisible sunlight and turns it into visible beams. It takes the invisible wind and turns it into the sights and sounds of rustling leaves and whistling branches. It takes the very reality of creation and surrounds you with it; towers over you with it, drawing your gaze upward. The trees bring about these sensory experiences.

Trees, it seems, have been central to human experience since the very beginning as we see in the first reading. There were many trees in the Garden of Eden, including the tree of life and the tree of the knowledge of good and evil. God meant for the trees in the garden (well, all but one) to sustain humankind with their fruit and beauty and begged the question of Adam and Eve – the same question that we today face – “Of what shall we eat?”

Daily, we are faced with the decision of what we should eat. Beyond the obvious necessity of physical sustenance, I mean that we must decide what feeds our very soul. What do I ‘take in’ that sustains and drives my innermost self? Where can I find this real food? In a very real way, Jesus addresses this question in today’s gospel from Mark. Jesus is moved with pity because the crowds have nothing to eat. Beyond the crowd’s obvious physical hunger, Jesus knew how starving they were for true food, the sort of which had been guarded by the cherubim and the fiery revolving sword since the Fall.

This story of the multiplication of the loaves and fishes answers the question “Of what shall we eat?” when we see it with its eucharistic significance and in light of salvation history. In so doing, we realize that the story points to the Eucharist and that the tree, itself, again takes center stage. In God’s mercy, he gives humanity another chance to make the right choice; to choose not the tree of the knowledge of good and evil as our ancestors did, but to choose the tree of life – the tree on which Jesus was crucified. Whereas everything was lost to Adam and Eve upon eating from the forbidden tree, by eating the fruit of the new tree of life – the body and blood of Jesus crucified – everything is given.

This new tree of life, just like the trees at of St. Francis Woods, makes the invisible visible and draws our gaze upward. It takes the invisible love of God and shows this love visibly in the body of Christ - the source of our faith at the summit of Calvary. The summit of our faith in the source of all creation. God, himself; our true food; our refuge.

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