11th Sunday A 14 June 2026 Mercy at its fullest
June is the month of the Sacred Heart, the source and centre of Divine Love for mankind.
The Heart of Christ burns with great love for each person, in the hope that each one will accept the offer of mercy, while there is still time.
When we look on a crowd of people, we may not feel great love towards them (traffic jam, crowded shops etc!), but each one of them is very important to God.
He can see what is wrong in a person, but He can also see the potential goodness that He has planted there. God did not make anyone to be bad; only good. He hopes for that goodness to emerge from the depths.
This is what we hope for whenever we pray for others.
We ask, invoking the Sacred Heart, that people everywhere will ask for the mercy of God, and so come to a better and a happier life.
We do not have to like people before we pray for them. We might like them afterwards, but to begin with, just ask for mercy; and this will have good effects. When we pray we come into God’s way of looking at things.
God sees the positive while we can be too much with the negative.
It is our own sin which makes us focus on the faults of others. Freedom from our own sin will enable us to see other people in a more generous light.
We will have a larger vision of what salvation is possible and necessary.
We must not resent the salvation of others, as in the
parable of the Prodigal Son (the older brother), or the Labourers in the
Vineyard (the early workers).
We cannot begrudge to God if He reclaims those He has created. It is His affair more than ours.
In the meantime we ask mercy for ourselves. It may be other people do bad things, but so do we. We will not try to work out who is better or worse, but merely pray that all can come to a better state.
We still have areas of weakness that need attention. Otherwise we fall into the old and familiar patterns that lead to sin.
We want to be people for whom the reflex action is the Christ-like one. So come and kick me, or crash into my car, and I will not be enraged, and will not curse and swear, or seek revenge!
We will not do those things because we have in us the mind of Christ.
The Sacred Heart is burning for us too, and we want to return some of that love – so that we do not grieve Our Lord by further sin of any sort.
So that we can be agents of His love and mercy for others - by our own merciful and patient attitude, our own Christ-like presence and behaviour, bringing healing and encouragement into circulation.
We have to work on this every day, not just here and there. Being here at Mass helps us to focus, but we have to carry these attitudes with us every day.
Most Sacred Heart of Jesus, have mercy on us.