(Homily 25th Sunday in Ordinary Time, Yr. C)
The readings of this Sunday revolve around Christian responsibilities in
relation to social justice and the good use of earthly riches. At the background of the liturgical texts
of this Sunday, we encounter an interrogation of where true riches or wealth
are found. To this, the first reading warns that true riches do not
coincide with inordinate ambition and avidity at the expense of the poor and
the needy. In the parlance of the Gospel passage, true riches are the riches of
faith, and we are astute when we use the riches of this world to help those in
needy. This manner of understanding does not come by easily; rather we obtain
it by means of prayer as evidenced in the second reading. At the heart of the
Gospel passage is the borderline between “the sons of this world” and “the sons
of light”, however this contraposition could be seen as a point of convergence
between the first reading and the Gospel passage, and by extension to the
second reading, for St. Paul calls the children of light to embark on prayers that
produce peace and destroys anger, quarrelling and class struggle. Prayer is indeed the medium and locus
through which true riches flow!
In the first reading (Am. 8:4-7)
we reflect on the passage from the prophecy of Amos. Amos is one of the
prophets regarded as a prophet of social justice. This fact is well
orchestrated in his prophecy, for he denounces the rich who cheat and exploit
the poor. Prophet Amos in this passage proposes the theme of the rapport
between the rich and the poor, the theme of social justice. Amos lived in
Israel around the 8th century B. C., when Israel was living in a
period of economic breakthrough and material prosperity. However, it was at the
advantage of the rich, they were falsifying the scales and increasing the
prizes of goods to their own pleasure, but at the detriment of the poor. As
such, he threatens them with divine judgment. Prophet Amos condemns those rich who use the vulnerability of the poor
to enrich themselves. The rich of the time of Prophet Amos enriched
themselves by cheating the poor, is this astuteness as seen in the Gospel? They
may be astute in the eyes of men, but before God they are empty, for they have
lost out in the eternal treasure. As a matter of fact, in the responsorial
psalm we see God’s vindication of the poor: “From the dust he lifts up the
lowly, from the ash heap he raises the poor” (Ps.113:7) and this serves as a response to the prophecy of Amos.
Amos therefore stood with the poor. He was
not an economic expert rather he was simply a prophet who speaks in the name of
God and before this phenomenon of injustice, he announces without fear the
judgment of God on those who enrich themselves at the expense of the poor:
“Yahweh has sworn by the pride of Jacob, ‘Never will I forget anything they
have done”’ (v.7). Just like Amos every Christian in the name
of God, has to be on the side of the poor and the weak especially in situations
of injustice and oppression. When Mahatma Ghandi was talking about the sins
of the modern world, he mentioned “wealth
without work and commerce without morality”. Indeed, the happenings of the
time of Amos are not far-fetched from the daily experiences of our present time
torn apart by the presages of greed, avarice, inordinate desire for wealth and
unfounded ambition. No doubt, the preaching of Amos has a clearer message for
our present day social standards than that of any other Old Testament prophet.
We are called therefore, to stop cheating others in our business places, using
lies to market our goods, and selling fake products at the cost of quality
ones. We cannot give God lip service on Sundays, and then go on throughout the
week exploiting others, Amos condemns this! True religion cannot go on with
exploitation of the poor and injustice. Such a religion is devoid of adequate
corresponding spirituality.
The Gospel passage (Lk.16:1-13) presents the parable of the shrewd steward with some
admonitions on the proper use of wealth. This parable serves as a sign of
warning to the contemporaries of Jesus, so as to decide for the Kingdom of God,
before it becomes too late. As a matter of fact, the admonitions that follow the parable give it a new dimension:
the disciples are expected therefore to demonstrate a good dose of intelligence
in the use of wealth, like the shrewd steward, although his was for his own
interest. Jesus applauds the steward for his astuteness in planning for the
future and not for his dishonesty.
The parable of the dishonest or the astute
steward reveals the dichotomy made by Jesus between “the sons of this world”
and “the sons of light”. However, it is as if Jesus praised the dishonest
servant for planning for his future. In that bid, we need to situate ourselves
into the historical context of that time, because that time among the Jews,
stewards had their own gains, illicit though. A steward's salary took the form of a commission on
the sale of his master's goods. This was his only salary. So in reducing the
debtors’ bills the steward was only giving up the commission due to himself. In
that frame work, what the steward gave up was part of his illegal gains. Little
wonder, Jesus seems to praise him for his “prudence”. He
praised his astuteness and not the act. He gave up all his illegal gains in
order to find friends and plan for his future. Thus, Jesus praised the
shrewdness of that steward for he used his wealth to help others. This is
contrary to the conduct of the rich of Amos time who impoverished the poor to
enrich themselves the more. Instead the astute steward used the riches of this
world to build up friendship for his own interest and future.
The central point of the parable of Jesus
on the shrewd steward is the affirmation that “the sons of this world are wiser
in their own generation than the sons of light” (v.8). However, Jesus by no means intends to praise the steward in
question because of his fraud at the expense of his master, by falsifying the
receipts of his debtors and by reducing the amount they owe. Instead Jesus
praises him for his astuteness, shrewdness and his craftiness in acting
promptly in order to secure for himself a future, when he will no longer be in
administration. Jesus bitterly affirmed
that the sons of the light (Christians) many a times are not astute and prompt
to secure for themselves eternal riches, like the children of this world
for their material interest. The children of this world do everything and can
go to any length to obtain what they desire; if we Christians should make the
same effort in doing good we would have been far ahead in our journey of
holiness. In comparison Jesus opined that “the sons of this world are wiser in
their own generation than the sons of light” (v.8). This indeed is a sort of challenge for the sons of light, for if Christians should pursue holiness
and are heavenly minded as the sons of the world pursue wealth and are future
minded, their light will dissipate the darkness of selfishness and inordinate
accumulation of wealth in the world.
Can something good be learnt from the
dishonest steward? His consciousness and concern for the future is presented to
us as a veritable example. Applying the parable to the theme of riches, Jesus
admonishes: “And I tell you, make friends for yourselves by means of
unrighteous mammon, so that when it fails they may receive you into the eternal
habitations” (v.9). Those to
befriend are the poor and the needy. It
is obvious that Jesus is not inviting us to acquire wealth through unjust means
and afterwards help the poor, far be it! Rather he is inviting us to use
what we have to help the poor and the needy, in order to guarantee our future
in Heaven, like the astute steward that befriended his master’s debtors in
order to secure his future in their houses. In few words, the Christian use of
riches is that of sharing with the poor and the needy. As such, a Christian is
astute and shrewd in the measure he shares his wealth with the poor and the
needy. A Christian is shrewd when he uses his or her riches to help those Jesus
called “the least of these brothers of mine” (Mt. 25:40), he went as far as identifying himself with them, for
“in so far as you did this to one of the least brothers of mine, you did it to
me” (Mt. 25:40). The dishonest
steward realized that his ill-gotten gains will not last forever, so he started
planning for his future. Do you as a child of God realize how passing the
things of this world are and how are you planning for your future, your eternal
future. The word of God therefore invites us to give up the riches of this
world and attachment to them, for the true riches that endure forever, the
heavenly riches that will secure our eternal friendship with Jesus and our
abode in heaven. The Good News of today
is that Jesus is inviting us to bank in the Eternal Bank of Heaven, where our
true wealth and treasure are secured. Therefore, we should use what we have
to win friends for our eternal dwelling, not just for the earthly dwelling.
At the conclusion of the passage, Jesus
warns us sternly that “No servant can serve two masters…You cannot serve God
and mammon” (v. 13). It is therefore, an invitation to put God
first in our life, to put God as our priority and everything else is
subordinated to Him. The concept mammon does not signify only riches, but
also the accumulation of earthly riches. On the other hand, it has to do
especially with the tendency of trusting in riches and economic powers as a
guarantee for security. But in the
parlance of Jesus, there cannot be two supreme values or absolutes at the same
time. He, who makes money, riches, accumulation of wealth and economic
power his supreme value, cannot serve and love God with all his heart as he
ought to. And he who serves and loves God cannot be slave to money. Riches,
money and economic powers should by nature be at the service of man, but many a
times, they tend to render him a slave. There
is therefore need for decision: for or against God, for God or for mammon. You
cannot serve both God and mammon, Jesus either has all of you or nothing of
you, he abhors any form of compromise. There is no 50-50 approach. Thus, it
is a call and a challenge to make a fundamental option for God. A Christian
thus, must pay attention to the
seduction of wealth, the avidity of
possession and the avarice of money,
which can contaminate not only the rich, but also the poor! If not, the
Christian compromises his faith in God. For this, St. Paul in his letter to
Timothy affirmed that “The love of
money is the root of all evils’ and there are some who, pursuing it, have
wandered away from the faith and so given their souls any number of fatal
wounds” (1Tm. 6:10).
In the passage of the second reading (1Tm. 2:1-8) St. Paul brings to light the necessity of prayer. At first he
admonished the Christian community to pray always and for all, thus he gives prayer a universal
undertone. Not just for all, later St. Paul advised that particular prayers
be said for those in authority: for Kings and those in high positions. In fact,
the prayer is for all, geared towards a peaceful co-existence of all in the
society. The light and the strength to work for true riches come to Christians
through prayer. A Christian prays for all, for Kings and for all in high
positions. The fact of praying for all
is a way of subordinating all to the Power and Sovereignty of God, and
subordinating the worldly riches to the riches that cannot be destroyed or
exhausted. In prayer we understand that God will judge the rich, whose act
of injustice towards the poor and the needy cries to God (as revealed in the
first reading). In prayer, we come to understand that the true richness of man
consists in the richness of his faith. The one who prays with holy hands lifted
up to heaven, without anger or quarrelling discovers the richness of salvation
and grace, that Jesus Christ, the Mediator offers. On the contrary, if one
prays with dirty hands stained with blood as a result of injustice and
iniquities, or with hands filled with hatred and rancor, that prayer cannot
rise up to heaven.
In the ambience of prayer, we rediscover
that all the riches of this world come from above (God), man is a mere
administrator. At the school of prayer,
we come to grasp that the riches and the wealth of this world are only means of
collaborating with God, the Creator of all and with his Son, Jesus Christ who
holds all things in being (cf. Col.1:17). And equally a means of serving others
better, so that when we leave the administration of this world, we will be
welcomed in heaven where true riches abide. Lord Jesus give us the grace to lay
lasting treasures in heaven and help us to render you a true and sincere
worship. Amen!
(Fr. Vitus M.C. Unegbu, SC)
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