First Reading: (Isaiah 55:10–11)
Responsorial Psalm: (Psalm 65)
Response: The seed that falls on good ground will yield a fruitful harvest.
Second Reading: (Romans 8:18–23)
Gospel: (Matthew 13:1–23)
Reflection:
Today's readings invite us to examine not the quality of God's word, but the condition of our hearts.
Isaiah reminds us that God's word is never empty. Like the rain and snow that nourish the earth, His word always accomplishes His purpose. Every time we hear Sacred Scripture proclaimed, every homily we receive, every moment of prayer we spend in His presence, God is planting seeds of grace within us. The power lies in the seed itself. The question is whether our hearts are prepared to receive it.
In the Gospel, Jesus presents the familiar Parable of the Sower. At first glance, it seems to be about four different kinds of people. Yet the saints and the early Fathers of the Church teach us that these four soils often exist within each of us.
Sometimes our hearts become like the path, hardened by pride, resentment, disappointment, or indifference. God's word cannot penetrate because we have stopped listening.
At other times, we resemble the rocky ground. We gladly receive God's word when life is peaceful, but when suffering, sacrifice, or trials come, our faith has no deep roots. Genuine discipleship requires perseverance, and roots are formed in hidden moments of prayer, silence, and trust.
Perhaps the greatest danger today is the thorny soil. Jesus tells us that worldly anxieties and the lure of riches choke the word. Many believers do not reject Christ outright. Instead, careers, financial worries, endless entertainment, technology, and constant distractions slowly crowd Him out. Faith does not disappear overnight; it is gradually suffocated by competing priorities.
Then there is the good soil-the heart that listens, understands, welcomes God's grace, and allows it to bear fruit. The good soil does not create the seed; God alone gives life. The disciple's task is simply to remain open, receptive, and faithful. This is the heart of Catholic spirituality: God's grace always comes first, but we must freely cooperate with it.
St. Paul, writing to the Romans, reminds us that our present sufferings are not worth comparing with the glory God has prepared for us. Like seeds hidden beneath the earth, God's greatest works often remain unseen for a time. Growth is gradual. Holiness is cultivated patiently. Grace transforms us little by little until, one day, the hidden life of Christ within us bears abundant fruit.
There is also a beautiful Eucharistic message in today's Gospel. At every Mass, Christ first sows His word through the Liturgy of the Word. Moments later, He gives us not merely His teaching, but Himself in the Holy Eucharist. The same Jesus who scatters the seed now enters our hearts under the appearance of bread and wine.
As we approach the altar today, Jesus asks each of us:
What kind of soil am I?
Is my heart hardened by sin? Shallow in faith? Crowded by distractions? Or open and ready to receive Him?
The wonderful news is that no heart is beyond God's grace. A hardened path can be broken open through repentance. Rocky soil can grow deeper through prayer and perseverance. Thorns can be removed through conversion and detachment from worldly distractions. The Divine Sower never stops sowing because He never gives up on His children.
The miracle of today's Gospel is not simply that the seed is powerful. The greater miracle is that God can transform ordinary hearts into fertile ground that yields thirty, sixty, and one hundredfold.
May we allow Him to do that work within us today.








