OT XVIII [C]
Eccl 1:2; 2:21-23; Col 3:1-5, 9-11; Lk 12:13-21
Charles
Dickens in his play “The Christmas Carol” gives the picture of a selfish
man, Mr Scrooge, whose sole aim in life was acquiring as much wealth as
possible at any cost. He considered Christmas celebrations as humbug, and
hated charity. He weighed human relationship against material wealth. He
never bothered to care for his nephew or his employees.
One night,
he saw an unusual figure in his bed room. It was a ghost in chains. The ghost
introduced himself as the ghost of his deceased partner Marley. He
came to warn Mr Scrooge about the futility of the life that he was leading. He
told him that some spirits would come to him and he should listen to their
message, to avoid the fate that Marley was suffering.
First came
the ghost of the past. He took Mr Scrooge to his past. He was presented as a
young man who did not heed to the voice of his parents; who abandoned the
love of a beautiful maiden to amass wealth. The second
ghost, the ghost of the present, took him to
the church where Christmas celebrations were being held; and to the house
of one of his employees. There he witnessed what others thought of him.
Everyone hated him due to his over attachment to wealth. The third ghost
took him to the future. He was taken to a house where a dead body lay unattended
and unlamented by any one. He was curious to see the dead man. The ghost
allowed him to see the corpse. Mr Scrooge was shocked, it was his own
death scene.
Mr
Scrooge learned a great lesson that his frantic chase for wealth was
meaningless. It would only lead him to eternal misery. This is the
message of today’s readings.
The author
of the book of Ecclesiastes, from which the first reading is taken, was
evidently a man of wealth and education. Like every Hebrew of his time he too shared
the view that material prosperity was one of the chief signs of God’s blessing
and approval. Yet he questioned the assumptions of his society. He declares the
truth that “a man who labors wisely, skillfully and successfully, must
leave what is his own to someone who has not toiled for it at all. So he
asks himself, “What profit comes to a man from all the toil and anxiety of
heart with which he has labored under the sun?”
The
man in the story of Jesus too is like this. He exhorted himself, “eat heartily,
drink well, and enjoy yourself.” He gave no consideration to his end. But God
said to him: “fool! This very night the demand will be made for your soul;
and this hoard of yours, whose will it be then?
We are all
familiar with the famous eruption of Mt Vesuvius in ancient times,
which buried the city of Pompeii in lava in a matter of minutes. The
lava and ash came quickly and in huge quantities, preserving
a snapshot of life in that ancient city, as if freezing a
moment from the past. When archeologists uncovered the lava-caked city, they
found entire families gathered around a meal - buried in lava before they even
knew the volcano had erupted; they found beasts of burden standing in
their stables; they also found some people who had seen or heard the eruption
and were trying, in vain, to run away when the eruption caught
up with them.
But
according to some records, the very first human remains that the
archeologists found were the skeletons of a man and a woman, preserved in
their lava shell. When they broke through that shell, they found the
skeletons' bony fingers clutching handfuls of gold coins.
The
temptation to trust too much in money is an old one - as old as money itself.
Today Jesus is encouraging us once again not to fall into it.
St Paul
advises us, “Let your thoughts be on heavenly things, not on the things
that are on the earth.”
One
very practical way to keep our thoughts on heavenly things and keep money
in its place is to sponsor an evangelization project as a family. If the whole
family is involved in saving and sacrificing in order to reach a goal
of this kind, it constantly reminds everyone in the family that money is meant
to be a means to a higher end, not an end itself. For example, a family could
commit to save enough money each year to sponsor a missionary priest, or
a child in an orphanage run by missionaries, or feeding orphans in an
orphanage for one week. Find out early how much it would cost and collect that
amount; or sponsor a seminarian during his years of formation, or a
certain number of Masses for the souls in purgatory. Or anything
like that you can do it directly that your incentive to help the disadvantaged
or the church will keep growing. Together,
as a family, you decide your goal, and then make a plan on how
you will be able to meet it. You make a poster with a chart on
it, so you can track your progress during the year.
And at the
end of the year, when you make your goal, you celebrate with a ceremony in
which the money is given to its destination.
Another way
to do it is to set a more challenging goal and join forces with another
family or two in order to achieve it. It also contributes to family
unity and growth in faith.
Jesus
doesn't want us to spend our lives building barns that we will never use. He
wants us to spend our lives building his everlasting kingdom in our hearts
and in the world.
There is a
wise saying in India:
Rivers do not drink their water. Trees do not consume their fruits themselves. Clouds do not rain for them. Thus, the wealth of the noble men is to be used for others.
May the Lord open our ears and minds to understand his words:
What does it profit a man to gain the whole world and lose his soul.