Chapter Chaplain's Homily Reflection - THE WORD OF GOD DOES NOT RETURN VOID

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THE WORD OF GOD DOES NOT RETURN VOID
God’s word has power. Every farmer knows that when a seed is planted, something begins - even if nothing is visible at first. Today, through the prophet Isaiah, the Lord reminds us that His word works the same way. “My word shall not return to me void.” Whenever God speaks, something starts growing – starts happening, why? There is power in his word.
Even when we do not see results immediately, God’s word is quietly at work—softening hearts, healing wounds, challenging our knowledge, convicting conscience, teaching wisdom, guiding decisions, and planting seeds that will one day bear fruit. Nothing God says is ever wasted.
In the Gospel, Jesus tells the Parable of the Sower to describe the spoken word of God, the same word that Isaiah says never returns empty. In the first reading, Isaiah compares God’s word to rain: it never falls in vain. It always accomplishes something. Even when life feels dry or complicated, God’s word is quietly working beneath the surface of the lives of believers.
Jesus then shifts our attention to the receiving agent - the soil. He uses the different types of soil to describe the condition of the human heart. Some hearts are rocky and prove impenetrable; some are thorny, choking what is sown in them; some are distracted and lack concentration, are discouraged, or are overwhelmed. And some hearts are ready—open, receptive, and willing. With this, the Gospel teaches us that the state of our hearts affects how the word of God germinates and how effective it becomes.
St. Paul adds another dimension. He speaks of creation groaning, waiting for redemption. Many of us know that feeling. We carry burdens, uncertainties, and quiet struggles. While such a condition impacts our appreciation and reception of the word of God, Yet Paul reminds us that these groanings are not signs of failure. Often they are groanings provoked by the word, stretching, pushing, preparing to bear fruit
The take-to-heart message of today is that God does not speak casually. His word has a mission, and until that mission is fulfilled, He continues to work. This calls for anticipation in the listener—a desire to hear, a readiness to receive.
The word of God is calling us today to offer God an open soil each time we listen—open hearts, open ears, open lives. We must trust that the One who speaks will surely bring His word to fulfilment. This is the kind of anticipation David expressed when he said, “I rejoiced when they said to me, let us go to the house of the Lord.” When we come to Mass with the intention of encountering God, we prepare ourselves to listen - and we leave with a testimony of what He has spoken. But if we come with the attitude of “business as usual,” we leave with no message and no transformation.
The good news is simple and beautiful: God never stops sowing. He never gives up on any heart. He sees possibilities where we see limitations. He sees future fruit where we see present struggle. But this truth also places a responsibility on us. If God is always sowing, then we must come ready to listen. The word is always speaking – the question is whether our hearts are prepared to receive it. We must be intentional in our hunger for the Word: eager for its nourishment, open to its correction, and willing to let its light shine into the dark corners of our lives.
When this happens, something remarkable takes place. We begin to discover that every time we come to Mass with expectation… with appetite… with a desire to encounter the living God… the seed of His Word finds room to take root. But if we come distracted, indifferent, or simply going through the motions, we leave with no message and no transformation.
So, the Word of God never returns empty. God is still sowing. The seed is still powerful. The only question that remains is this: Am I ready to receive?

Chaplain 

Arrowhead Desert Valley Chapter