HOMILY FOR THE 14th SUNDAY ORDINARY TIME YEAR A


1. Zechariah 9: 9-10
2.Romans 8:9, 11-13
Gospel: Matthew 11:25-30

                               " Yoked with Christ."

It was during a Bible study a priest asked the college student participants whether they really thought if the yoke of Christ was easy, and his burden light. The answer he got was resounding " No!" being asked to explain the students went on to recount the daily pains and discomforts they suffer in their attempts to be faithful to Christ's teachings. " I have this problem," said one of the students. " I pray  about it constantly and make all the effort I can, yet I keep falling into the same temptation over and over again." Another student called Johnson spoke about all his efforts to fight an addiction. " I have prayed about it. I have sought help. And I really try. Yet after a few days of apparent success, I find myself falling right back to where I started. " Many of us can identify with the predicaments of these young people. In today's gospel Jesus offers  us a way out: " Come to me, all you that are weary and are carrying heavy burdens, and I will give you rest."( Matthew 11:28). The rest he promises is a release from the experience  of serving God as a fatigue and a burden. The promise means that serving God could be transformed into a sweet experience of rest.

We may ask our self this question that when Jesus says " Take my yoke upon you, and learn from me; for I am gentle and humble in heart, and you will find rest for your souls"( verse 29), looks like we have a problem here! Is Jesus calling on those who are carrying  heavy loads to come and add a yoke to their burden? Doesn't that sound like adding affliction to the afflicted? No; Jesus is asking us to cast away our burdens and take on his yoke. This is because, unlike burdens we bear, his yoke is easy and his burden light.

Then what is this yoke of Christ? the yoke of Christ can be seen as the some of our Christian responsibilities and duties. Servants were said to be under the yoke of their masters( 1Timothy 6:1) and subjects under the yoke of their rules( 1King 12:10). To take the yoke of Christ, therefore is to put ourselves in relationship with Christ as his servants and subjects, and to conduct ourselves accordingly.

However, there is the better way to understand the yoke of Christ. From the history, it is known that among the Jews the yoke was put on the necks of two cattle so that together they could pull the plough as one. It always takes a pair to work a yoke. When Jesus asks you to take the yoke, you might as well ask who is your yoke-mate. Your yoke-mate is none other than Jesus himself. The yoke, in fact belongs to him and he only invites you to team up with him. The yoke of Christ is not just a yoke from Christ but also a yoke with him. To take the yoke of Christ is to associate and identify ourselves with him: Our destiny with his destiny, our vision with his vision and our mission with his mission. Thus we are invited to understand from this context that we are not pulling the yoke alone and by our power but together with Christ and by the strength that comes from him. It is to know that Jesus is not just a teacher who gives you instructions and homework but also a friend who helps you to do it.

There is a story of a man who had a dream. In the dream he was walking along a sandy beach with Jesus and they were replaying all the important moments of his life. The man noticed that for each scene there were two sets of footprints in the sand, one belonging to him and the other were two sets of footprints in the sand,  belonging  to Jesus. But he also noticed that when they came to the most difficult and trying moments of his life there were only one set of footprints to be seen. Thus the man could not understand this, so he asked Jesus: " Lord you said that once I decided to follow you, you'd walk with me all the way. Why is it then that during the most difficult periods of my life when I needed you the most you would leave me?" Jesus replied. " My child, I love you and I would never leave you."  During the most difficult moments of your life, when you see only one set of footprints, those were the times I carried you.


Dear brothers and sisters we should never forget that we are yoked with Christ. To this end, it helps to start each day with a prayer like this: " Lord, help me to remember that there is no problem I am going to face today that you and I together cannot handle." This is how the yoke becomes easy and the burden light.

Related Posts:

0 Response to "HOMILY FOR THE 14th SUNDAY ORDINARY TIME YEAR A"

Chapisha Maoni