Homily: June 2, 2023, Friday of the Eighth Week in Ordinary Time (Fruitless fig tree).

"When he reached it, he found nothing but leaves…”
A fig tree with leaves usually indicates the presence of ripe fruits since the fruits appear before the leaves. Therefore, a tree full of leaves should have many ripe fruits, but not this tree which Jesus approached in today’s Gospel by St. Mark. It had many leaves but no fruit at all.
What was wrong with this fig tree?
Did Jesus’ curse cause the tree to wither the next day, or was it a prophecy?
This incident is highly symbolic. The fig tree is mentioned about thirty times in the Old Testament, and about twenty-seven times in the New Testament. In the book of Genesis, Adam and Eve used fig leaves to cover up their nudity, an attempt to hide their sin of disobedience and rebellion.
And now in this Gospel, St. Mark mentions the fig tree event right before the cleansing of the temple event. What is the parallel?
The temple in Jerusalem was a remarkably beautiful building. Though it was a grand structure fit for the highest worship to God, the Jewish leaders had turned it into a ‘den of thieves’, a marketplace to earn from worshippers. Instead of maintaining it for prayer, they used it for profit. 
The temple, attractive like the fig tree, looked promising but similarly, did not produce any fruits.
In Luke 21:5, we read that, "While some people were speaking about how the temple was adorned with costly stones and votive offerings, (Jesus) said, 'All that you see here - the days will come when there will not be left a stone upon another stone that will not be thrown down.'"
Jesus prophesied that the temple would be destroyed again, and it did, 40 years after His crucifixion. Jesus exclaimed that no one will ever eat of the fig tree’s fruits again, and indeed, it withered the next day.
If we do not live up to our purpose, our living will be meaningless.
We are made for God, in the image and likeness of God, adorned with the beautiful gifts of the Holy Spirit. Our purpose is to produce abundant fruits of love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control.
If we only look good on the outside, but bear no such fruits as we should, what would become of us?
The fruits of the Spirit stem from a heart like that of Jesus. In this month of the Sacred Heart of Jesus, let us pray, "Jesus, meek and humble of heart, make my heart like yours."
And may our lives bring forth abundant fruits worthy of our worship and offering to God. Amen.

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