25th Sunday of Ordinary Time
Sept. 22, 2019
Luke 16: 1-17St. Anthony, Bronx, N.Y.
“If you aren’t trustworthy with dishonest wealth,
who will trust you with true wealth” (Luke 16: 11).
In one description of his educational program, St.
John Bosco said that he aimed to make of his pupils upright citizens and good
Christians. In his mind these 2
objectives were almost identical. A good
Christian is necessarily an upright citizen.
An upright citizen is infused with the goodness that comes from God even
if that citizen isn’t a professed Christian.
No one can serve 2 masters (cf. 16:13); a person
of integrity has only one master, one higher power whom he or she serves,
whether that service is expressed in worship or in daily living.
Jesus’ parable today is a little puzzling. It doesn’t seem to illustrate what he says about
serving either God or money, and on the surface it can be read as tho Jesus is
giving credit to dishonesty. He tells of
a situation that his listeners would have been familiar with. 1st-century Palestine was an agricultural
society, with numerous great landowners who lived in Jerusalem, Damascus, or
elsewhere and entrusted their estates to property managers—like the fellow
called a steward in today’s gospel.
Parable of the Dishonest Steward (Jan Luyken) |
This particular property manager has been caught
“squandering his master’s estate” (16:1)—perhaps embezzling funds or spending
his boss’s money too freely, living lavishly, like the German bishop who earned
the nickname “Bishop Bling” or the former bishop of West Virginia who’s been
found to have spent hundreds of thousands of diocesan dollars on jewelry,
chartered jets, 1st-class vacations, and more.
He’s in very hot water now and isn’t allowed to set foot in his former
diocese. Both of these church leaders
have been called to account, like the gospel’s steward.
The steward, however, before turning in his
accounts, has recourse to his master’s debtors—tenant farmers who had to give
the estate owner a share of their crops.
It would’ve been the property manager’s responsibility to set their
rents, and what he does today in adjusting those fees isn’t necessarily
crooked. It does aim to make friends
with those tenants, however, so that after he’s been fired he might find
employment and not be reduced either to begging or to hard manual labor.
The master praises his shrewdness—not his past
wastefulness, whatever that entailed.
Perceiving his predicament, the steward has taken decisive action to
deal with it. He knows how to use
mammon, material goods, money. So Jesus
observes that “the children of this world” (16:8), worldly people, know how to
deal with their own kind—as you and I can observe in any day’s news headlines
about business people, politicians, Hollywood elites, sports stars, and others.
Then Jesus contrasts that worldly prudence with
the behavior of “the children of light” (16:8), those who profess to be devout,
those who say they walk along paths lit up by divine truth. Are the children of light prudent or decisive
like the dishonest steward? Knowing
their predicament, do they take appropriate action?
What’s the predicament? All of us are going to have to settle our
accounts. The day will come, sooner or
later, when we’ll all come before the divine master to give an accounting of
our service. Would we like to face death
like Cardinal Wolsey, the ambitious, unscrupulous chancellor of Henry VIII who
fell out of royal favor after 15 years and died just before he could be put on
trial? His last words were to the effect
that he ought to have served God as diligently as he did the king. Or would we not rather die like another of
Henry’s lord chancellors, St. Thomas More, as “the king’s good servant but
God’s first”?
Mammon, material goods, money can be our
friend. It can be useful as long as we
keep it in perspective and use it wisely, to provide for what we truly need and
to assist our neighbor; in other words, if we are the masters of our
possessions and not the other way around; if we recognize that all we have
comes from God, belongs to him and is lent to us for a brief time in order that
we might serve him well, that by our actions we might reveal ourselves as
“children of light,” upright citizens and good Christians, ready to give a good
accounting of ourselves when we meet our divine master.
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