
Brassica nigra (black mustard), Cal-IPC 2026.
[Jesus] proposed another parable to them. “The kingdom of heaven is like a mustard seed that a person took and sowed in a field. It is the smallest of all the seeds, yet when full-grown it is the largest of plants. It becomes a large bush, and the birds of the sky come and dwell in its branches.” Matthew 13:31-32.
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One more time I had to acknowledge my city upbringing and rush to the all-knowing Internet to find out about the mustard bush. It seems to have been chosen by Jesus because of the tiny size of its seeds and the speed and resilience of the plant itself, regrettably now condemned as an aggressive weed in the USA, especially California, but with a glowing reputation in the part of the world where our Savior grew up. Read all about this star-crossed history here. However, it is no wonder that the Savior took this plant to make his point. It can flourish where many others cannot. Dry conditions seem to hold no threat for the mustard plant, one of the principal constraints for many plants. Even poor soil seems to be simply a challenge to this plant. And this is the plant which provides the raw material for that condiment on the dinner table around the world. And Jesus picked this example of hardy life and human benefit (at least in the Middle East) to make his point. And I found that its seed is really tiny:

Tiny mustard seed in between two fingertips, Dreamstime.
Yet another miracle of nature, where so much is contained in so little. And that is what Jesus was talking about. In fact, as he said in today’s gospel, “the kingdom of heaven is like a mustard seed” and began to speak of the power contained in such an insignificant little speck of life. And you can easily imagine small birds balancing on the branches of the mustard bush in the picture at the top of this reflection. So, then, it is in the field of our mind that this tiny seed is planted, and it is God’s hope (the sower) that it will find a good home there, be productive and become the strong, life-giving source of our activity as a child of God.
And there are parallels with the other examples of hidden life, both bad and good seen in everyday life. Anyone who has made a loaf of bread from scratch is amazed at what the yeast does, on its own with no help from us. How does it do that? And then there is the example of the sabotage inflicted on the farmer who had planted good seed only to suffer an enemy planting weeds where he had just sown. No doubt many of us have suffered at the hands of such people who have ruined something we tried to accomplish for others’ good. Jesus’ disciples clearly had not really understood what the Lord was getting at, and had to have everything ploddingly explained to them – which Jesus did, it seems, without exasperation – and there is another lesson for all of us! And the punishment of those who have wrecked the good intentions of others is also added, including that strange “grinding of teeth” which comes up from time to time in Scripture. What IS that all about? I have to confess even when driven to extremes of anger about something, I don’t think I have ever ground my teeth! It seems so weird if you have never done that. But it might be an unconscious reaction to a challenging situation I suppose. I once heard the strange squeaking noise of teeth being ground together. I was a Jesuit at that time, and we were on vacation in the middle of nowhere, and one of us had just returned from India (and had caught malaria there, but we did not know at the time). We were six to a room, and that fellow ground his teeth. It was a very strange sound, weird and creepy. But not the result of anger… However, according to AI, “bruxism” as it is called, is “extremely common” when experiencing anger, nervous tension, or frustration. New to me. You?
Well, the Lord goes on to assure us that those malefactors will receive the reward they deserve when “they are thrown into the fiery furnace at the end of the age”. Of course, they will be the ones who don’t even think in terms of regret or sorrow or asking forgiveness. In fact they might even be proud of the suffering they have caused. Consider Satan in Milton’s Paradise Lost, for example: “Better to reign in Hell, than serve in Heav’n,” . Or Gaston (Disney’s Beauty and the Beast), a literary and cinematic villain completely unbothered by his cruelty and entitlement. He proudly schemes to kill the Beast and manipulate others, never once questioning his own righteousness. Or O’Brien (from 1984 by George Orwell) the ultimate totalitarian antagonist. He tortures the protagonist not just physically, but psychologically, aiming to strip away reality, individuality, and even the concept of truth itself for the benefit of the Party. And I suspect pride is happily at work in most of these. So today’s readings have a lot to say about right living and its opposite. And the comparison is stark, with the call of the Savior, challenging as it is, clearly the more attractive, the cleaner and, I believe, the more rewarding. But that is one opinion. Evil always has a very attractive side. The thing is, where does it lead and how do you get there?

St. George and the Dragon, Carpaccio 1502, Scuola di San Giorgio degli Schiavoni, Venice, Italy.
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