This is “distraction”, he warned, and a “great danger of our time”.
The Pope continued, “Beset by lots of small talk, by many ideologies, by continuous opportunities to be distracted inside and outside the home, we can lose our zest for silence, for reflection, for dialogue with the Lord, such that we risk losing our faith.”
Rocky ground
Another way to receive Word of God, he highlighted, is “from rocky ground, with little soil.”
“There the seeds spring up quickly, but they soon wither away, because they are unable to sink roots to any depth”, he said. “This is the image of momentary enthusiasm, though it remains superficial; it does not assimilate the Word of God. In this way, at the first difficulty, discomfort or disturbance of life, that still-feeble faith dissolves, as the seed withers that falls among the rocks.”
Ground with thorny bushes
We may also receive the Word of God “like ground where thorny bushes grow”, the Pope emphasized.
The thorns, he described as “the deceit of wealth, of success, of worldly concerns.... There, the word becomes choked, dies or does not bear fruit.”
Good soil that bears fruit
Lastly, he pointed out, “we may receive it like good soil. Here, and only here the seed takes root and bears fruit.”
This parable, stressed Pope Francis, reminds us that the Word of God is a seed which in itself is fruitful and effective; and God scatters it everywhere.”
“Each one of us”, he said, “is ground on which the seed of the Word falls… and if we want, we can become good soil, ploughed and carefully cultivated, to help ripen the seed of