Fr. Jo's Reflection for the 16th Sunday in Ordinary Time, Year A, July 19, 2026
Those familiar with the famous radio talk-show host, Paul Harvey, recall how he told stories of famous people in such a way that listeners couldn’t predict the subject of his story until the very end. Paul Harvey would describe a kid who failed Math class many times, only to reveal that he was speaking about Albert Einstein. Or, a student who found college tough, and eventually dropped out, but turned out to be Bill Gates. Or, an amorous youth who became St. Augustine. Doesn’t that reveal that the good seed might be hiding in the midst of tares? Pope Leo XVI was perhaps few years ago a crying baby in Church whom some couldn’t stand.
The parable of the tares among wheats wouldn’t sound strange to anyone who grew up in the farm. Such was Jesus’ audience; they were mostly farmers. As kids in my family farm, we could help with planting seeds but we were not allowed to do the weeding, especially when the maize corn starts to sprout. My mother explained that it is very easy to mistake the maize for a weed called in Igbo, “atta.” They look so much alike that even adults can mistake one for the other, talk-less kids. But as they grow, the maize would start budding its seeds while the atta grows and grows without buds, revealing itself as weed to be uprooted. So, Jesus, like my mother, tells us in this parable: Let the weeds grow along with the wheat; the difference would be clear at harvest time.
Here is the practical lesson for the spiritual life: Be patient, do not jump into hasty conclusions about what you see. It takes time for the true nature of things to be revealed. Things and humans don’t always turn out the way they seem at first. It is often impossible to know for sure who is what, since we judge by appearances. The scribes and the Pharisees of Jesus’ day appeared to be more religious than others. Yet, for Jesus, they were masked hypocrites.
Nothing is more hazardous than to pass judgment, especially regarding an individual’s relationship with God. Even in cases of fairly obvious wrongdoing, we cannot always know all the circumstances underlying every action or inaction. For example, if St. Joseph were like many of us, he would have reported our Blessed Mother Mary to the authorities when he found that she was pregnant, out of wedlock. Mary would have been stoned to death with her Divine Child. The mystery of the incarnation would have been exposed to ridicule. What seems at first bad might prove the exact opposite, vice versa.
But Jesus isn’t urging a negligence of a person’s primary behavior, rather, that the mysteries of the kingdom are often imperceptible; it may be present but not clearly evident. Its start may be unspectacular, like the mustard seed or the yeast that leavened the dough. The tiny mustard shouldn’t be despised. A child need not be from a royal family before it is treated with honor. Jesus was a tiny child born in a manger but turned out the largest bush on which we find sheltered from our enemy—the devil. The leaven mixed with the dough might be relatively insignificant and disappears into the mix; yet, it doesn’t cease to work its magic of transforming the life of the dough with its intangible presence.
We’re to sow love, which is like a mustard seed, like the leaven, like the kingdom—not grandiose, but able to change everything. A problem child who frequented the principal’s office for extra admonitions was put with another teacher who moved her close to her desk. Rita reported to her mom, “She smiles at me.” Rita’s new teacher praised her artistic talents, found her dependable and would often send her on errands for her. Rita blossomed, and even helped other kids. The new teacher brought the kingdom of God right into her classroom, and the love multiplied. Rita herself turned out a celebrity teacher tin whose class every child wants to be. She smiles at them and celebrates their accomplishments with high-fives. Like the leaven or mustard seed, once sown, love spreads out to more and more people. Sow love, not hate.
Fr. Chukwudi Jo Okonkwo

