This parable of Jesus helped the early Church to
understand itself, but of course, it serves as a point
of reference for the Church in every age. The seed that
falls on rocky ground and has no root represents those
who believe for a while but they fall away in the time
of trial. And that trial is almost certainly
persecution. We may experience prejudice and even
discrimination sometimes because of our faith, but no
genuine persecution. But let us remember that there are
many places in the world where our fellow Christians and
fellow Catholics are severely persecuted and often in
danger of losing their lives, or the lives of those who
are family members and friends. In Iraq, Syria,
Pakistan, Nigeria, Ethiopia, Egypt and many other
places, violence against Christians, including murder,
is a daily threat that people must live with. It is one
thing here in America for a parent to say that their
teenaged son doesn't want to go to Liturgy on Sundays.
It is quite another thing for a parent to take their
teenaged son to Church in Syria and wonder if he will be
shot by rebel forces or bombed while praying after
Communion in Church. And if not him, what if you are the
one killed, and your children are left as orphans?
Imagine.
It would be so very easy for people to fall away from
faith in these kinds of circumstances, in these
situations where it is difficult for us to fully
appreciate the pressure that faithful Christians face
every day. It must take a great deal of faith to raise
your children in Faith knowing that by embracing Christ
they may end up dying for Christ before they reach adult
years. Yet they still believe, they still pray, they
still go to the Liturgy which can make them targets on
any given day. The Church of the Martyrs still exists as
it did so many centuries ago, and there are still plenty
of evil men who glory in the killing of the followers of
Christ.
At least for the present time, this is not the danger we
face. Our danger is in being the seed that fell among
thorns, that we can be choked by the anxieties and
riches and pleasures of life and fail to produce mature
fruit. It's quite a different situation than those who
face persecution. If you face persecution your focus can
be very sharp, because it can mean life or death, and
not only life or death in this life but also life or
death in the next world. However, riches and pleasures
can come at us in so many ways and measures that it is
not always so easy to focus a defense against them. It's
hard to judge them, evaluate them, and frankly they can
appear as blessings to many people even as, at the same
time, they rob them of grace.
If we look, let's say to Western Europe, what do we see?
Nations where the faith was lived and upheld and
preached and passed on for century after century, as so
many extravagantly beautiful churches testify to the
belief of the people who built them and prayed in them
generation after generation. Now so many of those
churches are nearly empty on Sundays. People have not
given up the faith in two generations because of the
threat of persecution. They have given up the faith in
favor of nicer cars, flat screen TVs, and expensive
clothing. They have given up prayer in favor of smart
phones, texting and instant messaging. They have given
up family prayer because they have also given up on
family life through contraception and abortion—no
longer, so often, even replacing themselves with
children that they raise to believe in Christ. They
would rather raise the roof at night clubs on the
weekends. No longer trusting in the providential care of
God but to entrust their well-being, their health and
their safety totally to the governments of the countries
they live in. What could go wrong with that?
I'm using Europe here, because it's easier and better to
look outside sometimes, to judge what is going on in
your own country. People in Western Europe are looking
for the good life, and there is nothing wrong with that.
We should all look for the good life and embrace it as
fully as we can. But the question is, what is the good
life? Is it really found in an ever-increasing amount of
material goods and services? I remember when I was young
the great youth movements of so many kinds in Europe
(and of course the U. S. as well) crying out against
materialism, capitalism and greed of every kind. Those
same rebels ended up becoming very materialistic indeed
and raising children who were even more so. It wasn't
materialism, capitalism and greed that ended up going
down the drain, because their campaigns were not
supported by any spiritual strength or guidance. It was
the Faith that was flushed away because the thorns and
thistles were coming so fast, and they weren't seen as
any threat at all. Why sacrifice? Why spend time in
church? Why follow laws that forbid certain pleasures?
Why stick to your spouse or raise children and give up
comforts and pleasures that you can enjoy for yourself?
As the churches continue to empty, so does the
willingness to sacrifice and to genuinely love others in
the family and outside the family, or even to have a
family at all. If Western Europe continues to give up
the Faith, something else will surely take its place. I
sincerely doubt that will bring peace and prosperity,
and I am fairly certain it will bring greater hardships
on those who do follow Christ.
We, here, we must persevere in our life in faith in
Jesus Christ and follow His way. We must persevere and
teach this way to our children. We must persevere and
shine the light of Christ in our communities even when
it may be inconvenient or uncomfortable because we live
in places where thorns are shooting up and people are in
danger of being lost. We must persevere because we too
can be easily tempted and easily choked off from the
life of grace unless we are careful to keep a hold of
the cross of Christ, for ourselves, for our children,
for our neighbors. We must persevere so that at the end
of our lives we know that we shall still live—and
because of that, we know how to live even today, in
Christ Our Lord.