AletheiAnveshana: Patience, Mercy, and Hope in a Broken World Wis 12:13.16-19; Rom 8:26-27; Mt 13:24-43 ( A/ 16)

Saturday, 18 July 2026

Patience, Mercy, and Hope in a Broken World Wis 12:13.16-19; Rom 8:26-27; Mt 13:24-43 ( A/ 16)

 


Patience, Mercy, and Hope in a Broken World

 

Wis 12:13.16-19; Rom 8:26-27; Mt 13:24-43 ( A/ 16)

 

 

Today’s Gospel presents a realistic picture of life. Jesus tells the parable of a farmer who sowed good seed in his field, but during the night an enemy sowed weeds among the wheat (Mt 13:24–30). When the servants discovered the weeds, they wanted to uproot them immediately. But the master replied, “Let both grow together until the harvest.” This parable reflects the reality of our lives. We live in a world where goodness and evil exist side by side. We experience the same struggle within ourselves. Why doesn’t God destroy evil at once? The Book of Wisdom answers this question. “Though you are master of might, you judge with clemency” (Wis 12:18). The Hebrew word רַחֲמִים (raḥamim), meaning “mercy,” comes from רֶחֶם (reḥem), meaning “womb.” God’s mercy is therefore like the tender, life-giving love of a mother who carries her child. His patience springs from his desire not to destroy but to restore.

 

Jesus reveals the same truth through the Greek word μακροθυμία (makrothymía), formed from μακρός (makros), “long,” and θυμός (thymos), “anger” or “temper.” It literally means “long-tempered” or “slow to anger.” God patiently gives every person time to repent and grow into holiness. Aristotle observed that virtue is formed through repeated good habits. People are not born virtuous; they become virtuous through patient formation and consistent moral choices. Jesus’ parable echoes this wisdom. Wheat does not mature overnight, and neither do holy people. God patiently accompanies our moral growth rather than demanding instant perfection.

 

Similarly, St. Augustine reminds us: “God judged it better to bring good out of evil than not to permit evil to exist.” This does not mean that God causes evil. Rather, in his providence, he can transform suffering into grace, failure into conversion, and even sin into an occasion for deeper repentance. The Cross of Christ is the greatest proof that God can bring the supreme good of salvation out of the greatest human evil. Saint Paul therefore assures us that “the Spirit helps us in our weakness” (Rom 8:26). God never abandons us. Even amid our struggles, his Spirit patiently shapes us into the image of Christ.

 

Before asking why there are weeds in the world, let us ask whether there are weeds in our own hearts—pride, envy, resentment, dishonesty, or indifference. Through the Eucharist, prayer, and the Word of God, Christ patiently cultivates the wheat of faith, hope, and love within us. Our world urgently needs raḥamim—compassion flowing from the heart—and makrothymía—patient endurance that refuses to give up on people. Families need it. Communities need it. Nations need it. The Church needs it. As we celebrate this Eucharist, let us thank God for his patient mercy. May he remove the weeds of sin from our hearts, strengthen the wheat of holiness, and make us signs of his compassion and hope until the final harvest.

 

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