Chapter Chaplain's Homily Reflection - LIVING LIGHTLY AND FREELY

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LIVING LIGHTLY AND FREELY

Life is full of struggles. These struggles constitute a heavy load to carry. These loads range from social and moral to personal and public. The three readings prescribe reasons why we carry heavy burdens. The first reading tells us that the burden we carry comes from war and breakdown in relationships. Some people carry the scars and burdens of breakdown in personal, national, or international relationships. In the light of the second reading, it is caused by the desires of the flesh and the passing of life. Some people carry the loads of sinful indulgence and human frailty. The Gospel tells us that the burden we carry comes from the interpretation of the law and religious observances and its unrealistic expectations.
The Gospel adds another source: the burden created by religious interpretation and unrealistic expectations. Jesus speaks of “yoke” and “burden” to describe how the religious leaders of Israel had made the practice of faith difficult. Their strict interpretation of the law placed heavy demands on ordinary people. Jesus Himself denounced the Scribes and Pharisees for tying up “heavy burdens, hard to carry,” and laying them on people’s shoulders without lifting a finger to help (Mt 23:4). In today’s Gospel, Jesus extends His invitation to all who are weary and weighed down by these religious pressures.
To understand Jesus’ message, we must understand the imagery. A yoke is a heavy wooden beam placed on two animals so they can pull a load together. In Scripture, the word “yoke” is often used figuratively to describe being under someone’s authority — servants under masters, subjects under rulers, or sinners under the slavery of sin. The burden Jesus refers to is the weight of unrealistic religious expectations and responsibilities imposed by the law.
When people are weighed down by burdens, what they need is rest. People seek rest in many ways — through entertainment, relationships, travel, food, drink, or even harmful coping mechanisms like drugs and alcohol. Yet none of these provide lasting peace. Jesus teaches that true rest is possible, but it requires a certain discipline: yoking ourselves to Him.
Jesus uses the farming image of two animals pulling a load together. A yoke is not a burden by itself; it is a partnership. It means two beings share the weight. So when Jesus says, “Take my yoke upon you,” He is really saying: “Come into partnership with me. Don’t carry life alone. Let me walk with you and pull the weight.” Christ’s yoke is not a tool of oppression but an invitation to companionship.
The yoke is the relationship; the burden is the weight. The yoke makes the burden bearable. When we carry life alone, the load feels crushing. But when we accept Christ’s yoke — His companionship, His teaching, His Spirit — the same burden becomes lighter because we are no longer pulling alone. The burdens of life do not disappear, but they lose their power to crush us. His yoke is easy because He is gentle. His burden is light because He carries it with us.
A yoke is easy only when the stronger one is doing most of the pulling. That is exactly what Jesus does. He does not remove every burden, but He shares it. He does not eliminate every struggle, but He strengthens us in it. He does not promise a life without crosses, but He promises we will never carry them alone. This is why His yoke is easy: He carries the heavy side.
When our will aligns with God’s will and we begin to live according to the mind of Christ, we experience the peace that surpasses all understanding. Walking in God’s ways is walking in company with Christ, whose food is to do the Father’s will. This is the path to real rest — not merely a break from work, but a deep spiritual peace.
The takeaway is simple: we need divine help to shoulder the problems that confront us daily. Because a yoke requires two, Jesus volunteers to be the second partner. He invites us to entrust our burdens to Him, to walk with Him, and to learn from Him. With Jesus, our burden becomes our song, and His joy becomes our strength.

Fr. Imo 

Chaplain 

Arrowhead Desert Valley Chapter