The
Church, Like a Vine, Grows and Spreads Everywhere
They are straying across the mountains and the high hills, they have
been scattered over all the face of the earth. What
does this mean, scattered over all the face of the earth? That they attach themselves to earthly
things, the things that glitter on the face of the earth: they love and desire
them. They do not want to die and be hidden away in Christ. Over all the face of the earth not only because they love earthly
things but because across all the earth there are sheep astray. They are
everywhere, but one thing, pride, is the mother of them all, just as Christians
who are spread over all the world have one mother, the Church.
So it is not to be
wondered at that pride gives birth to dissension while love generates unity.
The Church is the mother of all, and everywhere the shepherd in her seeks those
who are astray, strengthens those who are weak, cares for the sick and puts the
broken together again. Many of them are not even known to one another, but she
knows them all because she is merged with them all.
She is like a vine
that has grown and sprouted everywhere. Those in love with earthly things are
like sterile shoots pruned away by the grower’s knife because of their sterility,
cut away so that the vine should not have to be cut down. And those sterile
shoots, once they are pruned away, lie on the ground and stay there. But the
vine grows over all, and it knows those shoots that remain part of it, and it
knows the cut-off shoots that lie next to it.
Well then, shepherds, hear the words of the Lord. As I live, says the
Lord God...See how he starts. It is like an oath sworn by God, calling
his very life to witness. As I live, says the Lord God. The shepherds are dead but the sheep
are safe. As I live, says the Lord God. What
shepherds are dead? Those who have sought their own interests rather than
Christ’s. So what of the shepherds who seek Christ’s interests and not their
own? Of course there will be such shepherds, of course they will be found:
there is no lack of them and there never will be.
Source: The Liturgy of the Hours – Office of Readings
From a Sermon by Saint Augustine on Pastors
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