Heart of the Homily

Homily | July 16, 2026 | If The Burden Is Light, Why Am I Tired | (Episode 199)

St Augustine Catholic Parish

Use Left/Right to seek, Home/End to jump to start or end. Hold shift to jump forward or backward.

0:00 | 5:28

We challenge the myth that following Christ makes life easy, and we explain why Jesus offers a lighter way to carry real burdens instead of pretending they are not there. We connect the Gospel image of the yoke with Isaiah, Saint Augustine, and the quiet strength of humility that leads to peace. 
• the misconception that Christian faith removes suffering 
• the meaning of Jesus’ yoke as shared strength and direction 
• the invitation to come to Christ while burdened, not after life is fixed 
• Isaiah on the soul’s deepest desire and the emptiness behind success 
• Saint Augustine on restlessness as a path back to God 
• the exhaustion of control and the limits of self-reliance 
• meekness and humility as the foundation of peace 
Come to me, all of you who are tired and burdened. 


Thank you for listening! Visit us at www.saintaugustinechurch.org

The Myth Of An Easy Life

SPEAKER_00

One of the greatest misconceptions about the Christian life is that if we follow Christ, life will become easy. This is a subject we've talked about many times here. Jesus never makes that promise. In fact, he says something that almost sounds contradictory. Take my yoke upon you, for my yoke is easy and my burden light. How can a yoke be easy? How can a burden be light? After all, many of the people listening to Jesus that day were carrying tremendous burdens. They lived under the Roman occupation. They struggled to feed their families. Many were sick. Some had lost loved ones. They knew suffering. Jesus wasn't pretending those burdens didn't exist.

What Jesus Means By Yoke

SPEAKER_00

He was offering them a different way to carry them. A yoke was a wooden beam placed over two oxen so they could pull together. Typically an older, stronger ox was yoked beside a younger one. The younger ox still walked, it still worked, but it was a stronger ox that carried most of the weight and kept the younger one moving in the right direction. That's the image Jesus gives us. He never says you will have to do you will have no cross.

Come To Me As You Are

SPEAKER_00

No, he says yoke yourself to me. That's the difference. And the difference is everything. When we carry life by ourselves, even small burdens can become overwhelming. When we carry them with Christ, even heavy crosses become bearable because we are no longer carrying them alone. That's why Jesus begins with those beautiful words, come to me, all of you who labor and are burdened. Notice he doesn't say, Come to me in your life when it's perfect. He doesn't say that. No, he says, Come to me, all of you. Come. That's the heart of Christianity. Not first a list of commandments, not first a moral code. It's an invitation

The Desire Beneath Every Desire

SPEAKER_00

to a relationship. And the first reading from Isaiah speaks about this relationship, this remarkable tenderness. The prophet says, Your name is the desire of my soul. My soul yearns for you in the night. Isaiah understands something that our culture often forgets. Every human heart is searching for something. We spend our lives looking for happiness, for security, peace, and fulfillment. Some search it in success. Others look for it in money and pleasure, in things, others look for it in recognition and applause. And yet even when we obtain those things, there's often this lingering emptiness, this void. Why? Well, because the deepest desire of the human heart is not for things, it is for God. A very famous line that we've said many times, Saint Augustine expressed it beautifully, our hearts are restless until they rest in you. That restlessness is not a flaw in our design. It is the way of God drawing us back to Himself. Isaiah also says something profound. He says, O Lord, you mean out of peace to us, for it is you who have accomplished all that we have done.

The Exhaustion Of Self-Reliance

SPEAKER_00

How different that is from the spirit of our age. We're taught to believe that everything depends on us, our success, our future, that we have to control everything, our security, our happiness. Well, the result is that many people are exhausted, anxious, tired, and not simply physical, spiritually. They carry responsibilities that were never meant to rest entirely on their shoulders. The Christian life is not passive, but neither is it self-reliant. We work hard, we fulfill our responsibilities. We never forget that God is the one sustaining us. Everything good ultimately comes from him.

Meekness, Humility, And Real Peace

SPEAKER_00

And that's why Jesus describes himself with two surprising words. I am meek and humble of heart. Because you see, the world admires power, influence, and self-promotion. Jesus again and again points to humility. Because humility is the foundation of peace. A profound heart, a proud heart is always anxious, always comparing, always trying to prove itself. A humble heart knows that it is loved by God, and therefore does not need to earn its worth before the world. There's this beautiful irony in today's gospel. The one who carries the weight of the universe invites us to let him carry the weight of our lives. That's not weakness. That is faith. The saints discovered that peace is not found in having fewer responsibility or fewer problems. No. Peace comes from walking so closely with Christ that his strength becomes a greatness for us, becomes our everything.

Faith That Lets Christ Carry

SPEAKER_00

When we're yoked to him, we discover that the burden has not disappeared, but the one carrying it with us has made all the difference. Christ is there. Come to me, all of you who are tired and burdened. Amen.