IN CONTEXT - 18th Sunday in Ordinary Time 8/1/2010
FIRST READING: Ecclesiastes 1:2; 2:22-23. Vanity of vanities, says the Preacher, vanity of vanities! All is vanity. Sometimes a man who has toiled with wisdom and knowledge and skill must leave all to be enjoyed by a man who did not toil for it. This also is vanity and a great evil. What has a man from all the toil and strain with which he toils beneath the sun? For all his days are full of pain, and his work is a vexation; even in the night his mind does not rest. This also is vanity.
EXPLANATION: The author of this book, like the author of the Book of Job, poses to himself and to his readers the insoluble problem of life on this earth for man. He calls himself the son of David and king in Jerusalem. It was a literary device of that time to take the name of some distinguished, well-known historical figure. In this case it was the name of a man renowned for his wisdom, that of Solomon, the son of David.
However, even if he claimed to have all the wisdom of Solomon, which he had not, he could find no answer to his problem. He is looking for a solution in the wrong place, on this earth, where it is not found. The Jews had no revelation, or almost none, concerning a future life. They hoped that they would live on after their earthly death in some way or other. They had, however, no clear idea of how this would be. This author believes in the true God, although the way that God deals with men in this life dismays him. God, he says, does not have to justify his actions. Man has simply to take things as they come. Whereas Job is trying to understand why the innocent should suffer in this life, Ecclesiastes finds a problem even in happiness. What good is it, it is only a deception, for it cannot last.
says . . . Preacher: This Hebrew word means one who addresses the congregation or “qahal,” which in Greek is translated Ekklesia. Hence the origin of the name given the author by Greeks and Latins, Ecclesiastes, that is, Churchman.
all . . . vanity: The theme of his book. All things in this life, the pleasures as well as the sufferings, are empty and purposeless. They have no real explanation.
a man . . . leave all: To prove how useless and vain the things of this life are, he cites the example of a man who worked intelligently and skillfully and produced wealth, things of value. He has to die and leave them to somebody who did nothing to produce them. This is surely folly.
What has a man . . . toil: After all the toil and worry and strain he spent producing these goods, he has to leave them all!
all his days . . . pain: Life on earth is a succession of trials and troubles, labor and lamentation, folly and frustration.
even . . . night his mind does not rest: Man’s day is so full of labor and trouble that he cannot get to sleep at night. If he does, it is a fitful, restless sleep.
APPLICATION: While we sympathize with this poor man who could see nothing but emptiness, folly and vanity for man in this life, let us thank God that we have been given the full revelation through Christ. This is a revelation which the Jews lacked. We know that our purpose on earth is not to gather the wealth of this world or to enjoy all its pleasures and its power—all of which we have to leave behind us when death calls us. We know that we are put here for a short period of time during which, if we use our days properly, we can earn for ourselves a new life in which we shall have forever everything we need.
What a consolation, what a source of strength and encouragement this knowledge is for us! Our Christian faith puts a silver lining in the darkest clouds of life. We accept these darkest clouds of sufferings, disappointments and sorrows, because we know that God has a purpose for us in them—they are his means of making us worthy of the real life that is to come later. We accept the moments of happiness and joy with the same spirit. They are little tokens of the greater happiness and joy which will be ours in a few years time. The true, sincere Christian accepts the cross and the crown, the crumb and the feast, the aches and pains as well as the joy of good health, the funeral as well as the wedding, for he knows that all are part of God’s plan for man’s real welfare and eternal happiness.
We can appreciate our good fortune if we look around us. We need not look far to see some of our fellow men who, like the author Ecclesiastes, have no true explanation for the problems of life. They try not to think of these problems, but try as they may, they cannot keep them always in the background. They get themselves immersed in the affairs of this world. They strive to collect its wealth. They chase after earthly pleasures. They seek for power and political influence. They may succeed in getting little bits of some of these consolations. But never will they receive enough, never all together because one generally excludes the other. Worst of all, they know they have no solid grip on these slippery things of earth. They know that soon, all too soon, they must leave all these, their idols, and be taken by neighbors in a wooden box, to a plot of ground in which they will be buried deep, lest their corrupting flesh pollute the locality.
While we sincere Christians can thank God for making known to us the purpose and the value of our few years on this earth, we would not appreciate this gift of God if we did not feel the urge, and see the obligations we have, of doing all in our power to give this knowledge to our fellow men, our brothers, who also are God’s sons. The millionaire who is godless, if not anti-God, is in dire need of our help. The hobo who has no religion is in more need of prayer and a word of advice than of a dime. The communist who is striving in vain to make this earth a heaven for all men, needs to be told in what direction heaven lies.
All these are our brothers. We must help them to attain the one thing that matters. We may not be able to do much, but we must do what we can. God expects it of us. He has given us this knowledge of the true meaning and purpose of life in order that we may share it with all men.
Vanity of vanities! This world and all it holds is nothing but sheer folly and emptiness if seen by itself alone. But, if seen in the light of God’s revelation, it is a gift of God to man, a most useful and necessary gift. It is the bridge that spans the gulf between earthly and eternal life.
SECOND READING: Colossians 3:1-5, 9-11. If you have been raised with Christ, seek the things that are above, where Christ is, seated at the right hand of God. Set your minds on things that are above, not on things that are on earth. For you have died, and your life is hid with Christ in God. When Christ who is our life appears, then you also will appear with him in glory.
Put to death therefore what is earthly in you: immorality, impurity, passion, evil desire, and covetousness, which is idolatry. Do not lie to one another, seeing that you have put off the old nature with its practices and have put on the new nature, which is being renewed in knowledge after the image of its creator. Here there cannot be Greek and Jew, circumcised and uncircumcised, barbarian, Scythian, slave, free man, but Christ is all, and in all.
EXPLANATION: In last Sunday’s lesson from this same Epistle, St. Paul reminded his converts that through baptism they had died with Christ and had risen again with him. They were now new creatures. Today he urges them to keep their eyes on the Christ with whom they have been raised up to a new spiritual level or status. They must no longer be mixed up in the sinful things of this earth. They died to all this when they died with Christ in baptism.
raised up . . . with Christ: As he had already explained (see text of Sunday) to them.
your minds . . . above: The Colossians are now raised above their ordinary earthly natures. Their home is in heaven with Christ. They must, therefore, keep their eyes always fixed on that higher kingdom where
Christ . . . seated at the right hand of God: Christ, the Son of God who took to himself our human nature, is now in the highest place in heaven after God the Father. He is at God’s (the Father’s) right hand, a human way of saying the principal place of honor. He is there in his glorified human body as well as in his divinity.
put . . . earthly: Their whole attention must always be directed to being joined with Christ in heaven one day. This does not mean that they must take no interest in the things of this world. They must provide for their earthly needs. But in providing for these needs, they must never forget their real purpose in life.
you have . . . nature: As Christians they have died and risen with Christ. They have not yet the glorified bodies which they will get after their earthly death. They will have them, however, if they stay dead to the sinful things of this world. When Christ comes in glory to judge the living and the dead, they will be with him in their glory also.
put to death . . . impurity . . . idolatry: Practical Apostle that he was, he now warns them to shun the sins which, as pagans, they commonly committed. They were especially prone to impure sins, and some of their pagan idols were supposed to encourage such sins. Sacred prostitution was practiced at the shrines of many of the pagan gods, and so, for Gentile converts, to return to impure sins was in a sense to return to idolatry.
Do not lie to one another: Another vice common in the pagan world. For Christians, who possessed the truth of revelation and who were all brothers, members of the one body of Christ, this sin, this abuse of the gift of speech, was a serious offence.
put . . . nature: Paul is continually stressing the radical change Christianity has brought about in the converts. They are no longer what they were before conversion. They are raised to a new status; they are new men. Therefore, they must put away their old habits and ways of acting.
renewed in knowledge: They must learn more about God every day, and about their relationship with him.
image of its creator: Adam, the first man (Paul accepted the Genesis story of creation in its literal sense), was made into the image of God but was still an earthly man. The Christian is made according to a real image of God a spiritual man—because he is intimately united to Christ, who is the Son of God. That is, he is made one with Christ.
Greek and Jew: In the Christian religion all men are sons of God, brothers of Christ and true brothers of one another. There is no distinction of race or nationality here. Human nature is the one and only common bond.
Christ is all, and in all: They are all in Christ, and Christ is in each and every one of them. Nothing else matters but being a Christian. The old distinctions of race, nationality or class have no place in the Christian life. Christ alone matters.
APPLICATION: We all know what a true Christian demands of us. Today St. Paul is reminding us of it again. He tells us that in baptism we have become new men. Christ has taken us, united us with himself, and raised us to the new status of sons of God. We must therefore act like sons of God, not like sons of mere earthly men. The difficulty is that, even though we have become sons of God who will one day inherit heaven, we still have to contend with our earthly selves together with all their affinities and attractions to things earthly. We have died with Christ and risen with him, but we have not yet been given risen, glorified bodies. We have been given our citizenship papers, and an official passport to enter into our new country. But we are still in our country of origin, and have to make a long, arduous voyage before we take up residence in the new one.
Some Christians waver in their resolution and at times they give up this struggle against natural inclinations which, however, go against baptismal promises and hopes. What adds to each one’s natural weakness is the fact that we are living in an age and a society in which the majority of our fellow men have long since given up even the name of Christian. If they do not openly preach from the housetops that death and the grave are the end of man’s hopes, that man’s only purpose is to get all that is possible from this earthly life, and that they no longer believe in a higher purpose for man, they certainly show by the way they live that this is their only religion.
It is indeed difficult for even a sincere, dedicated Christian to live up to his faith and his hope in such surroundings. Yet, let us not forget that St. Paul was not demanding the impossible of his Gentile converts when he commanded them to put to death, to oppose effectively, all that was earthly in their make-up. Difficult as the practice of real Christianity is in today’s western society, it was much more difficult in the Greek and Roman world of St. Paul’s day. The Colossians were surrounded by their pagan fellow-countrymen, who laughed and jeered at the folly of the converts. To them it seemed that they had foolishly given up the pleasures of this life for the sake of some fairy castle in the sky.
But the converts persevered. Not only did they retain their faith, but they gradually won over the jeers and the scoffers. We can and we will do likewise, with the help of God’s grace, if we persevere in our loyalty to Christ and to the faith he has given us. We encounter temptations both from within ourselves and from without. We have to struggle against our own weaknesses and against the difficulties which the opponents of Christianity, and all things spiritual, place in our way. It is difficult to live a pure life in the permissive society which encourages all the lower instincts in man. It is difficult to be just when injustice is rife and profitable all around us. It is difficult to be truthful when unscrupulous neighbors use lying as the key to power.
Yes, it is difficult to be a true Christian, but neither Christ himself nor any of his Apostles ever told us the Christian life was easy. It never was and never will be. And yet the man who grasps its meaning, the Christian who is convinced that it is not this life but the next that really matters, can make light of these difficulties. He will take up his cross daily, as he has been told to do. He will follow Christ, knowing full well that the reward awaiting him is worth ten thousand times any hardships in this life that he is called on to endure in order to obtain it.
The true Christian is one “who has put aside his old self with its past deeds” and “who is growing daily in the knowledge and in the likeness of the image of his Creator”.
GOSPEL: Luke 12:13-21. One of the multitude said to Jesus, “Teacher, bid my brother divide the inheritance with me.” But he said to him, “Man, who made me a judge or divider over you?” And he said to them, “Take heed, and beware of all covetousness; for a man’s life does not consist in the abundance of his possessions.” And he told them a parable, saying, “The land of a rich man brought forth plentifully; and he thought to himself, ‘What shall I do, for I have nowhere to store my crops?’ And he said, ‘I will do this: I will pull down my barns, and build larger ones; and there I will store all my grain and my goods. And I will say to my soul, Soul, you have ample goods laid up for many years; take your ease, eat, drink, be merry.’ But God said to him, ‘Fool! This night your soul is required of you; and the things you have prepared, whose will they be?’ So is he who lays up treasure for himself and is not rich toward God.”
EXPLANATION: This episode in our Lord’s public life is narrated by Luke only. Jesus was surrounded by a large crowd to whom he was giving his message of salvation. Some men in the crowd asked him to arbitrate in a family dispute over property. This Jesus refused to do, for very good reasons, no doubt. This interest in property gave him the occasion to teach his hearers, and all of us, in a very effective parable, the relative value of this world’s goods.
Teacher, bid my brother: Teacher, “Rabbi” in Aramaic, was a title of respect. He was accepted as a Rabbi, a teacher of religion, by the masses.
divide . . . inheritance: It is possible that this man may have lost his right to his share in the inheritance.
me a judge: Christ refuses to interfere in this family dispute and excuses himself because this was not his mission or vocation. As the following words would seem to indicate, however, it was not justice only that was in question, but greed for earthly goods.
take heed . . . covetousness . . . possessions: He then explains this statement in the parable.
a rich man . . . plentifully: A certain man was already rich. He had many earthly possessions, and now had an added store: he had a good harvest.
What shall I do?: He had so much property that his stores were too small to hold it all.
build larger ones: He decided to build larger stores which would house it.
I will say to . . . soul: When he has stored it all safely he will see that he has enough for years to come so he will tell himself
take your ease . . . merry: He foresees himself as a happy man enjoying the good things of this life for years to come.
But . . . fool . . . of you: God steps in to upset all his earthly plans. He calls him “fool”, a term reserved to those who deny that there is a God (Ps. 13:1) in the Old Testament. This very night you shall die. He was indeed a fool because he left God out of his plans completely, and also because he was planning a very happy earthly future for himself which never materialized.
whose will they be?: The wealth, which he had spent all his days accumulating, will now go to someone else.
This night . . . God: Our Lord himself applies the parable: this will be the fate of all those who think only of amassing temporal wealth, to the total neglect of their spiritual welfare. Death always comes far too soon for people whose whole heart is centered in this world. Far sooner than they think, they will have to leave the riches they have been piling up. Worse than that, they will face the future life empty-handed. They have stored up nothing spiritual for themselves. All their time was given to earthly pursuits.
APPLICATION: The lesson of this parable is obvious to all, and it is perhaps as difficult to put into practice as it is obvious. To be in this world and not of it, to collect the necessary goods of this world by honest labor and yet remain detached from them, to possess but not be possessed by worldly riches, is an ideal to which our weak human nature responds very reluctantly.
A large percentage of Christians, however, do respond to the challenge manfully and loyally. They earn and use the goods of this world, while at the same time they keep God’s laws and earn wealth for heaven. Some there are who renounce even the right, which is theirs, to possess the necessary things of this world, by taking on themselves the vows of religion. Thus they set themselves free to devote their whole time and energy to the service of God and neighbor. Others, and they are of necessity the more numerous, have to own the world’s goods in order to provide for themselves and their dependents, but, while so doing, they never let their temporal possessions come between them and their God. To do this is not easy, but God’s helping grace is always available to the willing heart.
There is still a third group—those who resemble the foolish man described in the parable. Like him they are so enmeshed and ensnared in their desire to collect good things for their earthly life, that they forget that at any moment they may have to leave this earth and all they possess in it. They may not have large barns or grain bins bursting at the seams with the fruits of their fields or their market dealings, but they have allowed their possessions, large or small, to become the prison houses of their hearts and thoughts. In their mad rush for earthly treasure they give themselves no time to stop and think of the really important thing in life, namely, that soon they must leave this world and all it holds dear to them. But it is not the departure from this world that is to be feared. Rather, it is the arrival at another for which they have made no preparation. That other world of which they have often heard, but which they shrugged off as something fit for the weak-minded, will not open before them in all its awe-inspiring immensity. They will have a momentary glimpse of the eternal beauty and happiness that they lost for a “mess of pottage,” before they enter the unending valley of sorrow which they elected for themselves when, during their period of trial, they chose earthly baubles instead of God.
This has been the fate of foolish men and women in the past. It will, also, be the fate of many more in the future. It could be my fate, too, unless I remain ever on the alert to keep myself free from the snare of worldly wealth. I must remember that it is not the quantity of this world’s goods which I possess that will be my undoing, but the quality of the hold which they have on me. There are and will be millionaires in heaven, while many in the lower income brackets will find themselves excluded.
No man will be excluded from heaven because he lawfully possessed some of this world’s wealth. But a man will exclude himself from eternal happiness if he lets this world’s wealth possess him to the exclusion of God.
The fate of the rich man in the parable need not, and should not, be mine. I have still time to stop building larger grain bins and barns, and to turn my attention instead to collecting some treasure for heaven.-c287
