11th Sunday in O.T.
Eleventh Sunday in Ordinary Time – June 14, 2026
Readings: Ex 19:2–6a • Mt 9:36–10:8 Dcn. Bill Kenney
Neighborhood pick-up baseball games with your kid friends were always a lot of fun- as long as you weren’t the last player selected by the designated “captains”. You stand there in line with others, who are also not worthy of a captain’s status, hoping and praying you won’t be the last one picked. It was a first real public judgement of your athleticism, if not your popularity and personhood. You are picked with the hope and expectation that you will deliver for the team: get that hit, catch and throw the ball well, run fast. Your performance was often a reflection of your draft pick level at the next pick-up game.
Today’s Gospel from St. Matthew fits nicely into the “Ordination Season” of the Church year we are in. May and June are typically months to celebrate the sacrament of Holy Orders as classes and formation studies are completed for priests and deacons and new assignments await them. The players have already been selected through years of discernment. Now it is time to perform for the captain of the team, our Lord Jesus Christ.
In Matthew, Jesus, from his sacred heart, feels love and pity for his scattered, lost sheep. Like the twelve tribes of his Chosen People Israel, Jesus picks and ordains his twelve Apostles- those who are “sent out” to gather the forsaken, baptize them, shepherd them, grow their faith, so they can be harvested for their salvation in due time. Later in Matthew this is called, “the Great Commission”. The original twelve apostles were both chosen and ordained by Jesus Christ to be his closest followers, representatives, and special witnesses.
Jesus “Commissions” not only his Apostles and ordained clergy but also ALL of you, his disciples, to be missionaries and evangelists to bring home the lost sheep, starting with yourselves and your family members. In a sense, all followers of Jesus Christ are called to be apostles- those sent in mission for Christ. He entrusts all of us with the most blessed of all human tasks: bringing others to eternal salvation in Christ. Do you believe that you have been chosen by God to be His instruments to transform the Church and the world?
And how are we to perform as apostles, as those sent as laborers with authority to drive out unclean spirits and cure the sick? Our spiritual life is cleansed through the sacraments: baptism and regular reception of Reconciliation and the Holy Eucharist. Curing the sick can be both a physical and spiritual healing. Establish healthy living habits and, by your example, witness and share them with others. Pray for and with others for that spiritual healing they need and long for. Give freely the free gifts you have received.
Jesus did not know the day or the hour of the Father’s redemption of our souls so Jesus’ instructions have a sense of urgency to his Apostles and to us. “The Kingdom of heaven is at hand”. Let us proclaim this truth so that everyone is picked to be on the team, that we perform his commandments well, and that our last pick-up game will be an eternity with Christ, where the last one picked will be the first, for the glory of God.



