18th Sunday of Ordinary Time
Aug. 5, 2007
Eccl 1: 2; 2: 21-23Col 3: 1-5, 9-11
Luke 12: 13-21
Christian Brothers, Iona College, New Rochelle, N.Y.
Ursulines, Willow Dr., New Rochelle
I celebrated a parish Mass this morning, but there was a mission appeal by an outside speaker. The congregation at Iona College includes laity.
“What
profit comes to man from all the toil and anxiety of heart with which he has labored
under the sun?” (Eccl 2: 22).
The Worship of Mammon (Evelyn DeMorgan) |
Modern
technology is supposed to have made our work easier, faster, more
efficient: household appliances,
transportation, communication, etc. So,
theoretically, we ought to have more leisure time, more time to connect with
family and friends, with God and nature, more time for literature, the arts,
whatever deepens our humanity, more time to “think of what is above, not of
what is on earth” (Col 3:2).
It
doesn’t seem to work out that way, does it?
We need fast food and Chinese take-out because our lives have become
even faster-paced. Our children’s sports
and music lessons leave them no time for themselves; or they delve into video
games and the Web unendingly and don’t interact socially. We need instant gratification, and our
attention spans have shrunk to a bit more than nanoseconds—a word none of us
had even heard of 10 years ago. One
presidential election has barely ended before the next campaign begins.
“What
profit comes to man from all the toil and anxiety of heart with which he has
labored under the sun?” The author of
Ecclesiastes, who calls himself Qoheleth or “the Preacher,” was searching for
meaning in life, searching for God’s ways with humanity. He didn’t understand God’s purposes, but he
could see that working long, hard, and wisely and amassing wealth didn’t make
people happy, didn’t make them secure, didn’t put them at ease. So much that we spend our lives pursuing,
worrying about, or trying to avoid—it’s all vanity, emptiness, chasing the wind
(1:17). “All one’s days sorrow and grief
is his occupation” (2:23). Achievement,
wealth, fame, pleasure—Qoheleth considers all of these and finds they come up
short as the answer to life’s ultimate questions. Soon enuf we pass from the scene and leave
our property to others, leave our reputations behind us. “This also is vanity” (2:21,23).
When
Ecclesiastes was written, probably in the 3d century B.C., the Jews didn’t yet
have the insight that God will raise up our bodies at the end of time or even that
our souls are immortal, that there will be an eternal reward or punishment for
us, according as we have sought God and his purposes, or not. And therein is the answer to Qoheleth’s
questions.
Jesus
points us in that direction, e.g., with his parable of the rich man suddenly
called to judgment: “You fool, this nite
your life will be demanded of you” (Luke 12:20). Someone—maybe it was Garrison Keillor—has
observed that he’s never seen an armored car following a hearse. You really can’t take it with you: neither wealth nor fame nor reputation. We go into eternity with ourselves: our lives, the record of our words, deeds,
thoughts, relationships, above all our relationship with God.
Which
is what we religious are all about.
We’re not teachers or social workers or guidance counselors or ministers
of the sacraments 1st, but people in a relationship with God. “The essential contribution that the Church
expects from consecrated persons is much more in the order of being than of
doing,” Pope Benedict wrote in his recent apostolic exhortation on the
Eucharist.[1]
Our
lives are, 1st of all, centered on God and eternity, not on the accumulation of
wealth or the enjoyment of the fine things of life (cf. Luke 12:19) or building
a reputation or “fulfilling ourselves.”
Whatever we do or say or think is directed toward Christ, measured
against the standard of Christian discipleship.
At least that’s what we profess to strive for. By God’s grace we’ve been privileged over the
years to see confreres/sisters who’ve striven in that direction very well. We’ve lived with saints who very well “hid
their lives with Christ in God” (Col 3:3), who stored up great treasures in
heaven instead of on earth (cf. Luke 12:21).
Our
lives are, in the 2d place, witnesses.
By our chastity, poverty, and obedience; by our lives among our
brothers/sisters in a communion of love, forgiveness, mutual concern; by our
commitment to daily conversion—we testify to the world that Qoheleth is
right: “All things are vanity!”
(1:2) A thousand years are a blip of
time. Human generations pass “like the
changing grass, which at dawn springs up anew, but by evening wilts and fades”
(Ps 90:5-6). Only God is eternal. Only God matters—God and all who have been
recreated in Christ, “made new selves, renewed in the image of the Creator”
(Col 3:10). Our lives are evidence not
just of the emptiness of pleasure, of all material things, and of our egos, but
they are also evidence of the glory for which we hope, for which we long, “when
Christ our life will appear, and we too will appear with him in glory” (cf.
3:4).
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