Homilette for Monday, October 22, 2007

Monday, XXIX Week of Ordinary Time

(Luke 12:13-21)

Go into the houses of poor people as well as rich, in Mexico as well as the United States, and you are likely to see a lot of stuff. We live in an age of mass production when manufactured goods like leaves on a tree multiply beyond many persons’ belief. The gospel today serves as a warning about over-concern with material wealth, with stuff. It proposes that we should store up our treasure in heaven.

Admittedly the farmer in the story is an egotist. As one commentator says, “He talks to himself; he plans for himself; he congratulates himself.” But is he really so different from many people today? Too often people think primarily of themselves. Even children are planned and nurtured to fit their parents (often a single parent’s) designs. The barns which the farmer builds to store grain for the future serve the same purposes as savings portfolios today. They do not make the person bad; they make him or her rich. When pursued without a thought about others, they also make him foolish.

Of course, Jesus is not condemning prudent people with retirement plans and savings for emergencies. But he is criticizing severely non-attention to the needs of those having little to merely survive. Before we spend all that we have on “stuff” or invest all that we have for “tomorrow,” we must assist those who lack bread today. Ironically, this kind of concern proves to be the best plan for the future. Jesus makes clear throughout the gospel that sharing with the needy deposits a treasure where it counts the most.