Friday of the Fourteenth Week in Ordinary Time
(Hosea 14:2-10; Matthew 10:16-23)
In Robert Frost’s memorable poem, “Tree at my Window,” the
poet compares a tree to himself. He says
that like the tree he sees in a storm, he tosses and turns in his sleep. But as the tree, moored to the earth, does
not fall, he survives his restless nights.
In today’s reading from the prophet Hosea compares the people of Israel
to different trees.
Unmoored from idols and connected to God, Israel is as
strong and fragrant as a Lebanon cedar. The
people are gloriously fruitful like an olive tree. Also, like the protection the cedar and the
cypress provide, they raise grain to nourish themselves.
Like Israel, we must rid ourselves of idols so that we might
thrive like a redwood or a giant oak. Idols,
of course, include more than metals objects some think of as bringing them good
luck. Idols are what we wrongly consider
as sources of satisfaction, even of happiness.
They can be sports teams, rock stars, perhaps our cars or our
telephones. We must acknowledge the Lord
as the source of all good things and duly give Him thanks and praise.