OT XIV (A): Zec 9:9–10; Rom 8:9, 11–13; Mt 11:25–30
During the
U.S. Independence Day celebrations yesterday, many Americans likely heard words
from Emma Lazarus’ famous poem inscribed on the Statue of Liberty: “Give me
your tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning to breathe free…” It is a
powerful national image of welcome and hope.
Today’s
Gospel offers something even deeper: not just political freedom, but rest for
the soul. Jesus says, “Come to me, all you who labor and are overburdened, and
I will give you rest.”
In the first
reading, the prophet Zechariah speaks to a people weighed down under foreign
rule. He promises them a different kind of king—meek, humble, riding on a
donkey—not a warrior of domination, but a bringer of peace. This king will
banish the instruments of war and establish a reign of true freedom.
The psalm
echoes this hope: God “raises up those who are bowed down.” He is not distant
from our burdens; He sees them, and He responds with compassion.
Fulton Sheen
has a wonderful reflection on two very simple imperatives that Christ uses
throughout the Gospels – Come and go! Our Lord says, Come,
follow me… Come and see… Come and have breakfast…and also Go and do likewise….
Go and sin no more… Go in peace… and many more. In today’s Gospel, we hear
the beautiful invitation: Come to me, all you who labour and are
overburdened, and I will give you rest.
Not “come
when you are perfect.”
Not “come when you have everything figured out.”
Not “come when you are strong.”
Just come.
Bring your burdens, your fears, your wounds, your sins—bring your whole self.
And yet,
there is something puzzling in this invitation. Jesus promises rest, but then
immediately adds: “Take my yoke upon you.” A yoke is not something we associate
with rest—it is a tool for work. It seems like a contradiction: rest on one
hand, burden on the other.
A yoke is a
wooden beam placed across the shoulders of animals to help them carry a load. A
poorly fitted yoke wounds and exhausts. A well-fitted yoke allows the load to
be carried smoothly and even shared.
This is what
Jesus is offering: not the removal of all burdens, but a different way of
carrying them. His yoke is “easy,” His burden “light,” because it is made for
us—it fits our souls. More importantly, when we are yoked to Christ, we are not
pulling alone. He bears the greater weight.
We might
prefer that following Christ meant having no burdens at all. But that is not
the promise of the Gospel. Instead, Christ invites us to take up our cross—our
yoke—and walk with Him. This yoke leads to the cross, yes, but the cross leads
to life.
Consider
something very practical. For many families, even coming to Mass on Sunday can
feel like a burden—getting everyone ready, managing tensions, arriving late,
worrying about how others might look at you. It can feel easier to stay home,
rest, and avoid the effort altogether.
So we might
ask: is it worth it?
The Church
teaches that Sundays are meant for rest, but not a rest that excludes God. As
Canon 1247 reminds us, we are called to worship and to experience the joy
proper to the Lord’s Day. Worship is not opposed to rest—it is its deepest
form.
In fact, the
kind of rest Jesus offers is not simply physical relaxation. It is the peace
that comes from placing our lives in God’s hands.
Pope St.
John XXIII expressed this beautifully. At the end of long, demanding days
during the Second Vatican Council, he would pray: “Lord, it’s your Church. I’m
going to bed. Take care of it.”
President
Dwight Eisenhower, facing the immense pressures of World War II, prayed in a
similar way: “Lord, with your grace I’ve done the best I can. You take over
until morning.”
Both men
understood something essential: rest comes not from escaping responsibility,
but from surrendering it to God.
That is what
it means to be yoked to Christ. We still walk, we still labor, we still carry
burdens—but we no longer carry them alone.
So if you
feel weary, discouraged, or overwhelmed, hear again the words of Jesus: “Come
to me.” Put your shoulder under His yoke. Walk with Him. Trust that He is
carrying more than you can see.
And you will
find rest—not the absence of burdens, but the presence of Christ within them.
In 1863, the
Civil War was raging, and the end was far from sight. Abraham Lincoln was out
for a ride with his friend and aide Noah Brooks. Brooks, noticing the
president’s obvious fatigue, suggested that he take a brief rest when they got
back to the White House. “A rest,” Lincoln replied, “I don’t
know about a rest. I suppose it’s good for the body, but the tired part of me
is inside and out of reach.” — Lincoln was acknowledging a very important
truth. There are many sources of fatigue. Physical fatigue may be the most
benign. There is fatigue that comes from stress, fatigue that comes from worry,
fatigue that comes not only from worrying about the future but also worrying
about the past, and fatigue that comes from trying to be something we are not.
What we really need is not time off nor time away. Rather, what we need is time
that is filled with meaning and purpose – time that is saturated with the grace
of God. What we need, according to this wonderful Gospel paradox, is a
different burden, Christ’s, and a new yoke, His.
So, he is
inviting us today: "Come to me, all you who labor and are burdened, and
I will give you rest.
Take my yoke upon you and learn from me,
for I am meek and humble of heart;
and you will find rest for yourselves.
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