Saturday of the Thirteenth Week in Ordinary Time
First Reading: Amos 9:11-15
Responsorial Psalm: Psalm 85:9-10, 11-12, 13-14
Gospel: Matthew 9:14-17
Daily readings: https://bible.usccb.org/bible/readings/070426.cfm
All week, Amos has been bringing hard words. Judgment, exile, warning, fire. And today — the very last verses of his book — he pivots completely. "Yes, days are coming, says the LORD, when the plowman shall overtake the reaper." That is an image of such overwhelming abundance that harvest cannot keep pace with planting. The mountains will run with wine. Ruined cities will be rebuilt. People will be planted firmly in their own ground, and never uprooted again. After all the warnings, after all the honest accounting of what had gone wrong, Amos ends with God's intention: restoration. Not because the people earned it, but because God is who he is.
Jesus speaks today about new wine and old wineskins. John's disciples come asking why his followers do not fast — and Jesus's answer is essentially: something new is here. You cannot pour what I am bringing into the old containers. It is not that the old is bad — it is that what I bring is so alive, so expansive, so full of new possibility, that it needs room to breathe. New wineskins. New cloth. A new way of being with God that is less about anxious religious performance and more about being present to the bridegroom who is right here, right now.
Today in the United States, many families are gathering for the Fourth of July — cookouts, fireworks, children running in the yard, the ordinary abundance of a summer holiday. It is a good day to notice that abundance itself is a form of God's speech. Amos's image of mountains running with wine was his way of pointing to the same thing: a God who, when he restores, does not restore stingily. He restores with such generosity that the harvest cannot keep up. Whatever container you have been using for your faith — if it has felt tight, dry, or too small — today's readings invite you to ask for a new one.
A few questions to sit with today:
1. Is there an area of my faith that has started to feel like an old wineskin — brittle, tight, going through motions? What would it look like to ask God for something new and alive there?
2. Where have I experienced God's abundance this week — not just spiritually, but in ordinary life: food, laughter, rest, the people around me?
3. Is there something I have been mourning or grieving that God might be ready to restore? Have I brought that hope honestly to him?
4. Am I present to the bridegroom who is with me right now — or am I mostly anxious about whether I am doing religion correctly?
One small thing for today and tomorrow:
At some point in the holiday today — a meal, a moment of fireworks, a quiet pause — say a simple prayer of gratitude. Not a long one. Just: "Thank you. This is from you." Let the abundance around you be a reminder of Amos's final word: restoration, wine running down the mountains, planted and never uprooted.
Lord Jesus, Amos ends his hard book with your Father's heart laid open: restoration, abundance, a people planted so firmly they will never be uprooted again. I want to believe that for my own life. There are places that feel like ruins — relationships, habits, hopes that collapsed a while back — and I sometimes wonder if they are too far gone. Today's readings say they are not. Help me to be a new wineskin for whatever you are pouring. Loosen what has gone brittle. Give me room to receive you freshly, not just faithfully. On this holiday, surrounded by ordinary abundance, help me to see it all as a word from you. May Mary, who treasured God's abundance in her heart, teach me to receive it the same way. Amen.
If you'd like to share: where have you experienced God's restoration in your life — something ruined that was rebuilt, something lost that came back?