Wednesday of the 12th Week in Ordinary Time, Yr. II: reflection
Theme: Bear good fruits wherever you are planted.
Reading: Mt 7:15-20
In the Garden of Eden, God instructed humanity
through Adam and Eve to bear fruits - to increase and multiply. Hence, every
human being enters this world with the same injunction that was given to our
first parents – to bear fruits. To enable humanity to bear good fruits, God
endowed human nature with innocence and goodness. When this nature of goodness and
innocence was corrupted by sin on the tree of Eden, God restored it by His
sacrifice on the tree of Calvary. Thus, it is expected of all those who have
been buried and raised with Christ to bear fruits that are consistent with their
nature – good fruits.
In today’s gospel reading, Christ reminded us of
the nature we bear (redeemed nature), which He won for us through His death and
resurrection, and urged us to bear fruits that will reflect such nature or image.
This calls into question the type of fruits we bear in our families, in the
lives of our friends, and in our society. Do we bear fruits that reflect the
nature won for us by Christ on the Cross or fruits that reflect our fallen
nature in Eden?
Of course, the fruits that will reflect our
original nature that was reclaimed for us by Christ are fruits of peace, love, compassion,
kindness, charity, unity, sanctity, patience, faithfulness, humility,
self-control and many other virtues. On the other hand, the fruits that will
reflect the fallen nature in Eden are all indecent actions, jealousy, anger, envy,
hatred, division, selfishness, immorality and other vices. By our fruits, we
will know whether we are good trees or bad trees in the society.
Dear friends, Christ challenges us to examine
our lives today to know the fruits we are producing, because, as he promised,
every tree that doesn’t bear good fruits will be cut down and thrown into fire.
Do not permit the bad economy of our nation to push you into bearing fruits
that are not consistent with the nature Christ reclaimed for you on the Cross.
May the works of your hands bear good fruits this
Wednesday. Amen
Fr Isaac Chima
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